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Getbig Main Boards => Gossip & Opinions => Topic started by: Pneumothorax on December 18, 2014, 05:21:20 AM

Title: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Pneumothorax on December 18, 2014, 05:21:20 AM
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/12/17/us-usa-pennsylvania-college-idUSKBN0JV2S520141217

Who thought making a college for only hebrews would be a good idea?  Apparently some people did...  It's not going to end well, go figure.  I wonder if only hebrews are allowed to teach as well?
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Vince G, CSN MFT on December 18, 2014, 05:40:01 AM
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/12/17/us-usa-pennsylvania-college-idUSKBN0JV2S520141217

Who thought making a college for only hebrews would be a good idea?  Apparently some people did...  It's not going to end well, go figure.  I wonder if only hebrews are allowed to teach as well?


Wow...a school on financial collapse.  Who the fuck cares?
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: G_Thang on December 18, 2014, 05:44:23 AM
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/12/17/us-usa-pennsylvania-college-idUSKBN0JV2S520141217

Who thought making a college for only hebrews would be a good idea?  Apparently some people did...  It's not going to end well, go figure.  I wonder if only hebrews are allowed to teach as well?

 ::)

Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: calfzilla on December 18, 2014, 05:57:49 AM
How is their basketball team doing?
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Marty Champions on December 18, 2014, 05:58:20 AM
I always try to help blacks then bring them down but my effort never seems to matter
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: MANGOOS on December 18, 2014, 05:58:49 AM
Evil white men is guilty and of corse police  :'(
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: muscleman-2013 on December 18, 2014, 05:59:14 AM

Wow...a school on financial collapse.  Who the fuck cares?

::)

(http://static.eharmony.com/dating-advice/wp-content/uploads/images/images-cut_nolisten.jpg)
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Victor VonDoom on December 18, 2014, 06:17:54 AM
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/12/17/us-usa-pennsylvania-college-idUSKBN0JV2S520141217

Who thought making a college for only hebrews would be a good idea?  Apparently some people did...  It's not going to end well, go figure.  I wonder if only hebrews are allowed to teach as well?

That is your 44th post?  Bah!  Doom disapproves.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Parker on December 18, 2014, 06:35:33 AM
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/12/17/us-usa-pennsylvania-college-idUSKBN0JV2S520141217

Who thought making a college for only hebrews would be a good idea?  Apparently some people did...  It's not going to end well, go figure.  I wonder if only hebrews are allowed to teach as well?
smh...
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Walter Sobchak on December 18, 2014, 06:36:51 AM
How is their basketball team doing?

They were recruiting Trayvon Martin and Mike Brown. So they've taken a step back.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: _aj_ on December 18, 2014, 06:56:55 AM
If it's only for Hebrews, then it isn't that the whites or Asians are blowing the curve. Holy shit, that means that the academic bar to clear is lying on the floor and 91% of the Hebraic brethren there are tripping over it.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Rambone on December 18, 2014, 07:05:57 AM
They were recruiting Trayvon Martin and Mike Brown. So they've taken a step back.

All I know is that their football team has gone to shit after they cut offensive guard Eric Garner last year after he quit during off season conditioning drills. Dude was always sitting out plays on the sidelines in the 4th quarter. It's almost like he couldn't catch his breath or something.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: El Diablo Blanco on December 18, 2014, 07:12:43 AM
I want to startup an ALL WHITE college. 
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: SF1900 on December 18, 2014, 07:59:13 AM
http://www.howard.edu/

Howard undergraduates have a mean composite SAT score of 1,082.[27] The students come from the following regions: New England 2%, Mid-West 8%. South 22%, Mid-Atlantic 55%, and West 12%.[27] Howard University is almost exclusively (91.2%) African-American.[4]
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: dr.chimps on December 18, 2014, 08:07:24 AM
How's that Temple U Cosby scholarship holding up?
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Skorp1o on December 18, 2014, 08:20:54 AM
I want to startup an ALL WHITE college. 

Should be successful, but Math results won't be as good as no one will be copying from the chink in the class room.

Incident rates will be very low compared to a black college, bar the one off Roger Elliot style slayings once in a very while:

"You girls have never been attracted to me. I don't know why you girls aren't attracted to me, but I will punish you all for it. It's an injustice, a crime, because... I don't know what you don't see in me. I'm the perfect guy and yet you throw yourselves at these obnoxious men instead of me, the supreme gentleman"

(http://ipress.ua/media/gallery/full/e/l/elliot_rodger.jpg)
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 18, 2014, 08:44:33 AM
Hebrew U's are notorious for their poor academics and corruption.  I've posted examples before.  If Obama had a son he shouldn't send him to a Hebrew U.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: bigkid on December 18, 2014, 08:46:09 AM
Much higher percentage then I expected.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 18, 2014, 08:57:14 AM
Hebrew U's are notorious for their poor academics and corruption.  I've posted examples before.  If Obama had a son he shouldn't send him to a Hebrew U.

If Obama had a son - he would be either a similarly worthless dork and spineless dweeb or otherwise very embarrassed of his father and have nothing to do with him. 

As for this college going under - its common sense.  Why go to school when you can make more dealing, banging on the streets, collect welfare, etc? 
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Option D on December 18, 2014, 09:28:34 AM
I went to a black college

Morehouse College

Hermain Cain went there too, as well as Martin Luther the King, Edwin Moses, Samuel L Jackson, Spike Lee

well heres the wiki

Morehouse alumni include notable African-Americans such as: Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., theologian Howard Thurman, businessman and former Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain, filmmaker Spike Lee, filmmaker Robert G. Christie (a.k.a. Bobby Garcia), actor Samuel L. Jackson, polymath and creative genius Stephan B. Hall, Gang Starr rapper Guru, Olympic gold medalist Edwin Moses, Lloyd McNeill, Jazz flutist, USPS Kwanza Stamp designer, the first recipient of Howard University's MFA Degree, former Bank of America Chairman Walter E. Massey, the first African-American mayor of Atlanta Maynard Jackson, Major League Baseball first baseman and 1969 World Series MVP Donn Clendenon, former Secretary of Health and Human Services Louis W. Sullivan, and former United States Surgeon General David Satcher.

According to Morehouse's own "About Us" page, Morehouse was the first historically black college to produce a Rhodes Scholar. The school's first Rhodes Scholar, Nima Warfield, was named in 1994, the second, Christopher Elders, in 2001.[49] A third, Oluwabusayo "Topé" Folarin, was named in 2004. Morehouse has been home to seven Fulbright Scholars, Damon M. Lombard (1995), John Thomas (2004), Jason T. Garrett (2006), Morgan C. Williams, Jr. (2006), Lasean Brown (2008), Eric R. Baylor (2008) and Wendell H. Marsh (2009).[50][51]

Since 1999, Morehouse has produced five Marshall Scholars, five Luce Scholars, four Watson Fellows and 2010 White House Fellow, Erich Caulfield.[52][53] Previous Watson Fellows include, Craig Marberry '81, Kenneth Flowers '83 and Lynn P. Harrison III '79.

Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: JOHN MATRIX on December 18, 2014, 09:32:28 AM
Hebrew U's are notorious for their poor academics and corruption.  I've posted examples before.  If Obama had a son he shouldn't send him to a Hebrew U.

I would love to see their frustrated efforts to blame racism for this one.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Option D on December 18, 2014, 09:33:06 AM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Morehouse_College_alumni
these are just a few fine gents that walked the yard at Dear Old Morehouse

Walter J. Leonard  former Assistant Dean Harvard Law School; former President of Fisk University; Two Fellowships are named in his honor at Oxford University

Richard J. Powell 1975 Distinguished Professor of Art History at Duke University; editor-in-chief, the Art Bulletin; Wilbur Lucius Cross Medalist, Yale University Alumni of the Year Award

Ronald S. Sullivan Jr. 1989 Professor, Harvard Law School and Director of the Criminal Justice Inst. at Harvard Law; Legal Analysts CNN, Fox News

Charles V. Willie 1948 Distinguished Professor Emeritus, Harvard University Graduate School of Education

John S. Wilson, Jr. 1979 Executive Director of the White House Initiative on Historically Black Colleges and Universities; former Assistant Provost at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Robert L. Mallett 1979 former Vice President, Pfizer Corporation, President Pfizer Foundation/Member of Accordia Global Health Foundation’s Board of Directors

Arthur E. Johnson 1968 former President and COO, Lockheed Martin I&SS, and President, IBM, FSC Division

Shaka Rasheed 1993 Managing Director, J.P.Morgan Asset Management
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 18, 2014, 09:35:17 AM
I went to a black college

Morehouse College

Hermain Cain went there too, as well as Martin Luther the King, Edwin Moses, Samuel L Jackson, Spike Lee

well heres the wiki

Morehouse alumni include notable African-Americans such as: Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., theologian Howard Thurman, businessman and former Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain, filmmaker Spike Lee, filmmaker Robert G. Christie (a.k.a. Bobby Garcia), actor Samuel L. Jackson, polymath and creative genius Stephan B. Hall, Gang Starr rapper Guru, Olympic gold medalist Edwin Moses, Lloyd McNeill, Jazz flutist, USPS Kwanza Stamp designer, the first recipient of Howard University's MFA Degree, former Bank of America Chairman Walter E. Massey, the first African-American mayor of Atlanta Maynard Jackson, Major League Baseball first baseman and 1969 World Series MVP Donn Clendenon, former Secretary of Health and Human Services Louis W. Sullivan, and former United States Surgeon General David Satcher.

According to Morehouse's own "About Us" page, Morehouse was the first historically black college to produce a Rhodes Scholar. The school's first Rhodes Scholar, Nima Warfield, was named in 1994, the second, Christopher Elders, in 2001.[49] A third, Oluwabusayo "Topé" Folarin, was named in 2004. Morehouse has been home to seven Fulbright Scholars, Damon M. Lombard (1995), John Thomas (2004), Jason T. Garrett (2006), Morgan C. Williams, Jr. (2006), Lasean Brown (2008), Eric R. Baylor (2008) and Wendell H. Marsh (2009).[50][51]

Since 1999, Morehouse has produced five Marshall Scholars, five Luce Scholars, four Watson Fellows and 2010 White House Fellow, Erich Caulfield.[52][53] Previous Watson Fellows include, Craig Marberry '81, Kenneth Flowers '83 and Lynn P. Harrison III '79.



I knew it.  I asked you a few times but you dodged answering.  Not an expansive list considering how long Hebrew Us have been around.

I would love to see their frustrated efforts to blame racism for this one.

I'm sure they will find a way.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: calfzilla on December 18, 2014, 09:39:00 AM
Should be successful, but Math results won't be as good as no one will be copying from the chink in the class room.

Incident rates will be very low compared to a black college, bar the one off Roger Elliot style slayings once in a very while:

"You girls have never been attracted to me. I don't know why you girls aren't attracted to me, but I will punish you all for it. It's an injustice, a crime, because... I don't know what you don't see in me. I'm the perfect guy and yet you throw yourselves at these obnoxious men instead of me, the supreme gentleman"

(http://ipress.ua/media/gallery/full/e/l/elliot_rodger.jpg)

Skorp is on fire lately.  ;D
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Option D on December 18, 2014, 09:42:38 AM
I knew it.  I asked you a few times but you dodged answering.  Not an expansive list considering how long Hebrew Us have been around.

I'm sure they will find a way.

you asked what? You have to understand that Getbig isnt my life as it is yours, i dont see everything....

and also that list is a small sample size. i didnt want to copy and paste the whole list which is why i included the link.
But because you refuse to click a link. Here are some others.

Academia[edit]Educators[edit]
Benjamin Brawley
James Nabrit, Jr.
Louis W. Sullivan, 17th Secretary of Health and Human ServicesName Class year Notability Reference(s)
Russell L Adams 1952 Chair, Department Afro-American Studies, Howard University (1971-2005); Professor Emeritus, Howard University  
Benjamin Brawley 1901 first Dean of Morehouse College  
Calvin O. Butts 1972 President, SUNY College at Old Westbury; Pastor, Abyssinian Baptist Church [1]
Ronald L. Carter 1971 President, Johnson C. Smith University; former Dean of Students Boston University and the University of the Witwatersrand in South Africa  
James A. Colston 1932 2nd President, Bethune-Cookman University; President Knoxville College; President Savannah State University; 2nd President Bronx Community College  
Samuel DuBois Cook 1948 first Black Professor Emeritus and Trustee Emeritus at Duke University; President Dillard University 1974-1997  
Charles D. Churchwell 1952 former Dean of Library Services at Washington University in St. Louis; Brown University and Miami University (OH)  
Guy C. Craft 1951 former Dean of Library Services at Chicago State University; former Library Director at Robert W. Woodruff Library of the Atlanta University Center and former Interim Dean of the School of Library and Information Studies at Clark Atlanta University  
Abraham L. Davis 1961 Distinguished Professor and Chair, Political Science Department, Morehouse College  
Mordecai Wyatt Johnson 1911 First African-American president of Howard University [2]
James C. Early 1969 Distinguished Director of Cultural Heritage Policy at the Smithsonian Institution Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage, Washington, D.C. [3]
Eddie Glaude 1989 Chair, Center for African American Studies and Professor at Princeton University; Guest Contributor: The Tavis Smiley Show [4]
Marshall Grigsby 1968 former President of Benedict College and former Vice President, Provost and CEO of Hampton University  
John Hopps, Jr. 1958 former Director of the Charles Stark Draper Laboratory and Distinguished Physics Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Recipient of the Materials Advancement Award  
David Jones 1983 Vice President of Human Resources, Stanford University  
Walter J. Leonard  former Assistant Dean Harvard Law School; former President of Fisk University; Two Fellowships are named in his honor at Oxford University [5]
James Nabrit, Jr. 1923 Second African-American president of Howard University and former Deputy United Nations Ambassador  
Calvin Mackie 1990 former Professor of Engineering, Tulane University; winner of the 2003 Presidential Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics and Engineering; Black Engineer of the Year for College Level Educators  
Walter E. Massey 1958 President, School of the Art Institute of Chicago; former Professor of Physics at the University of Chicago; former Dean of the College of Physics at Brown University; former Provost of the University of California System; President Emeritus at Morehouse College  
Richard McKinney 1931 first African American President of Storer College; former Dean at Virginia Union University and Morgan State University  
Richard J. Powell 1975 Distinguished Professor of Art History at Duke University; editor-in-chief, the Art Bulletin; Wilbur Lucius Cross Medalist, Yale University Alumni of the Year Award [6]
Ronald S. Sullivan Jr. 1989 Professor, Harvard Law School and Director of the Criminal Justice Inst. at Harvard Law; Legal Analysts CNN, Fox News  
James F. Williams  current Dean of Libraries University of Colorado at Boulder , 2002 Melvil Dewey Medal recipient  
Charles V. Willie 1948 Distinguished Professor Emeritus, Harvard University Graduate School of Education  
John S. Wilson, Jr. 1979 Executive Director of the White House Initiative on Historically Black Colleges and Universities; former Assistant Provost at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology [7]







Business[edit]
Herman Cain
Walter E. Massey
Robert L. Mallet former Deputy Secretary of Commerce former Vice President of PfizerName Class year Notability Reference(s)
Shaka Rasheed 1993 Managing Director, Lazard Asset Management  
Ronald D. Brown  former CEO, Atlanta Life Financial Group, Inc  
Nathaniel H. Bronner, Sr. 1940 founder and former CEO, Bronner Bros., which is also the publisher of Upscale Magazine  
Herman Cain 1967 former CEO, Godfather's Pizza [8]
Emmett Carson 1981 CEO and President, Silicon Valley Community Foundation  
James W. Compton 1961 Board of Directors, Ariel Investments, Inc.; retired President & CEO, Chicago Urban League  
Reginald E. Davis 1984 President, RBC Bank, former Sr. Executive, Wachovia; named one the 75 Most Powerful African-Americans in Corporate America by Black Enterprise magazine  
Russell Ewing 1991 Executive Director, SEI Investments Company.  
Dale E. Jones 1982 Vice Chair, Heidrick & Struggles International, Inc.  
Robert L. Mallett 1979 former Vice President, Pfizer Corporation, President Pfizer Foundation/Member of Accordia Global Health Foundation’s Board of Directors [9][10]
Walter E. Massey 1958 former Chairman, Bank of America; former Director of the National Science Foundation  
Kent Matlock 1986 CEO of Matlock Advertising & Public Relations  
John W. Mims 1982 Sr. Vice President Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide  
Arthur E. Johnson 1968 former President and COO, Lockheed Martin I&SS, and President, IBM, FSC Division  
Shaka Rasheed 1993 Managing Director, J.P.Morgan Asset Management  
Rufus H. Rivers 1986 Managing Director, RLJ Equity Partners, Board of Directors: Thomas & Betts, the National Association of Investment Companies (NAIC)  
Stephan B. Hall 2010 Founder & CEO, Mansa Education Group  
Robert T. Ross 1981 Director, NJ Wealth Management Banking at Merrill Lynch  
Maceo K. Sloan 1971 Chair & CEO NCM Capital Management Group and Chair & CEO Sloan Financial Group, Inc., Board of Directors, SCANA Corporation  




Entertainment[edit]


Music[edit]
Babatunde OlatunjiName Class year Notability References
Uzee Brown, Jr. 1972 Opera Singer, Composer  
Byron Cage 1987 Grammy Nominated Gospel Singer; NAACP Image Award nominee and winner of six Stellar Awards [11]
Keith "Guru" Elam 1983 (Group) Gang Starr, Rapper, pioneer [12]
Edmund Jenkins 1914 Harlem Renaissance Composer studied under Kemper Harreld  
Canton Jones 1985 Grammy nominated Gospel Singer  
Martin Luther McCoy 1992 musician and actor [13]
Babatunde Olatunji 1954 Grammy Award winning Nigerian drummer, social activist and recording artist; Drums of Passion. [14]
Shakir Stewart 1996 Senior Vice President of Island Def Jam Music Group and the Executive Vice President of Def Jam [15]
  




Film, television and theatre[edit]
Spike Lee
Samuel L. Jackson at a Los Angeles eventName Class year Notability Reference(s)
Samuel L. Jackson 1972 actor [16]
Erik King 1985 actor, "Dexter" [17]
Spike Lee 1979 film director and producer [16]
Seith Mann 1995 television director: The Wire, Grey's Anatomy; winner of the NAACP Image Award  
Bill G. Nunn III 1976 actor, School Daze, Mo Better Blues, New Jack City [18]
Avery O Williams 1986 screenwriter; Notes In A Minor Key, Re-Directing Eddie [19]
Stu James 1989 Broadway and television actor; Color Purple, Dreamgirls, All My Children, General Hospital [20]
Rockmond Dunbar  actor, Soul Food, Girlfriends  




Government, law, and public policy[edit]Federal government[edit]
Congressman Sanford Bishop
Earl Hilliard, fmr. Congressman
Congressman Major Owens
David Satcher, former U.S. Surgeon GeneralName Class year Notability Reference(s)
Sanford Bishop 1968 U.S. Congressman (Georgia) [21]
John Brewer 1989 Associate Administrator, Foreign Agricultural Services and General Sales Manager, United States Department of Agriculture [22]
Julius E. Coles 1964 former U.S. Ambassador to Senegal; former President Africare  
George Haley 1949 former Chair U.S. Postal Rate Commission and Ambassador to the Republic of Ghana; brother of Alex Haley [23]
James L. Hudson 1961 Director of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development; Chair, National Capitol Revitalization Corporation Board [24]
Earl F. Hilliard 1964 former U.S. Congressman (Alabama) [25]
John Hopps Jr. 1958 former Deputy Under Secretary United States Department of Defense [26]
Howard E. Jeter 1970 former U.S. Ambassador to Nigeria; former U.S. Ambassador to Botswana  
James Nabrit, Jr. 1923 former Deputy U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations; second African American President of Howard University [25]
Robert L. Mallett 1979 former Deputy Secretary of Commerce U.S. Department of Commerce; VP Pfizer Corporation, President Pfizer Foundation [9]
Major R. Owens 1956 U.S. Congressman (New York) [27]
Cedric Richmond 1995 U.S. Congressman (Louisiana)  
David Satcher 1963 16th U.S. Surgeon General, former president of Morehouse School of Medicine [28]
Joel Secundy 1993 Deputy Assistant Secretary, Service Industries, International Trade Administrations, United States Department of Commerce [29]
Louis W. Sullivan 1954 former U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services and current President Emeritus of Morehouse School of Medicine [30]
Horace T. Ward 1927 First African American to challenge the racially discriminatory practices at the University of Georgia (UGA) School of Law. First African-American to be appointed to the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia, and former member of the Georgia Senate [31]
Nate Bennett-Fleming 2007 shadow U.S. Representative for the District of Columbia [32][33]




State government[edit]
Julian BondName Class year Notability Reference(s)
Julian Bond 1971 Civil rights leader, former Georgia state representative & Chairman of the NAACP [16]
Terrance Carroll 1992 Speaker, Colorado House of Representatives  
Kenneth Dunkin 1989 Illinois House of Representatives  
Leroy Johnson 1949 Senator; first African American elected to the Georgia General Assembly since Reconstruction [34]
John Monds 1987 Highest number of votes received by any Libertarian candidate ever [35]
Frank Peterman 1985 Florida House of Representatives  
Bakari Sellers 2005 Youngest member elected to the South Carolina General Assembly [36]
Andre Thapedi 1990 Illinois House of Representatives  
Perry Thurston Jr. 1982 Florida House of Representatives  
S. Howard Woodson 1942 Bachelor of Divinity Morehouse School of Religion; former Speaker, New Jersey General Assembly  




Mayors[edit]
John Wesley Dobbs
Maynard JacksonName Class year Notability References
Claude Black Jr. 1937 first Black mayor Pro Tem San Antonio, Texas; Civil Rights Leader; Pastor Mt. Zion Baptist Church, San Antonio, Texas [37][38]
Chuck Burris 1971 first Black mayor of Stone Mountain, Georgia  
John Wesley Dobbs 1897 the unofficial "Mayor" of Sweet Auburn Avenue (1937-1949); Civic Leader and co-founder of the Atlanta Negro Voters League [39]
Maynard Jackson 1956 first Black mayor of Atlanta, Georgia; Jackson served three terms as Mayor; founder and CEO of Jackson Securities Inc.; National Development Chair, Democratic National Committee [40]
Ed McIntyre 1956 first African-American mayor of Augusta,GA  
Alvin Parks, Jr. 1983 Mayor, East St. Louis, IL (2007- Present)  
James O. Webb 1953 Mayor Glencoe, Illinois; established the first HMO in Illinois and served as Chair, President and CEO of the Dental Network of America (of the Health Care Service Corporation) [41]
Clinton I. Young 1972 Mayor, Mt. Vernon, NY (2008- Present)  
  




Judges and lawyers[edit]
George W. Crockett, Jr.
Reginald C. Lindsay
Jeh JohnsonName Class year Notability References
Michael D. Carter 1986 Judge, Superior Court, Los Angeles County [42]
George W. Crockett Jr. 1931 former U.S. Congressman, United States Congress; Founding Member of the National Lawyer's Guild; Co-founded the first racially integrated law firm in the U.S.; first Black attorney in the U.S. Department of Labor [43]
Ralph B. Everett 1973 President and CEO, Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies [44]
Joseph Jerome Farris 1951 Justice, United States Court of Appeals 9th Circuit [45]
Robert V. Franklin 1947 Retired Judge, Ohio District Court of Appeals.  
Odell Horton 1951 Justice, U.S. District Court W. Tenn. [46]
Reginald C. Lindsay 1967 Justice, United States Court of Appeals 7th Circuit [47]
James L. Hudson 1961 Director of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development; Chair, National Capitol Revitalization Corporation Board [24]
Michael D. Johnson 1990 Judge, Superior Court, Fulton Co., Georgia [48]
Jeh Johnson 1979 Secretary of Homeland Security, first black Partner, Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP, named to the National Law Journal's 50 Most Influential Minority Lawyers; appointed General Counsel for the Defense Department by President Barack Obama; former General Counsel U.S. Air Force.  
C. Vernon Mason 1967 disbarred lawyer, Tawana Brawley case, Howard Beach incident.  
Stephen L. Maxwell 1942 first Black District Court Judge in Minnesota [49]
Tyrone C. Means 1973 Founding Partner, Thomas Means Gillis & Seay; Counsel and Board Member, Martin Luther King Jr. National Memorial Project Foundation [50][51]
Graham T. Perry c.1920 First African American Assistant Attorney-General for State of Illinois [52]
Olu Stevens 1992 Circuit Court Judge for the 30th Circuit KY [53]
Thomas Sampson Sr. 1968 founding Partner of Thompson Kennedy Sampson & Patterson, the oldest minority-owned law firm in the state of Georgia. [54][55]
Jerome Walker 1981 Partner Troutman Sanders, LLP; former General Counsel for the Hong Kong & Shanghai Banking Corp. Ltd. [56]
Horace T. Ward 1949 Federal Judge, U.S. District Court Northern, Georgia; Inducted into the National Bar Association Hall of Fame and recipient of the Trumpet Award for Civil Rights Advocacy [57]
Brent Wilson 1973 Partner, Elarbee Thompson Sapp & Wilson; Who's Who in American Law; Listed among America's Top Black Lawyers by Black Enterprise ; Chamber's USA Best Lawyers for Business. [58]
Richard T. White 1967 Sr. VP and General Counsel for the Auto Club Group and Chairman of the Association of Corporate Counsel [59]
  

Journalist and media personalities[edit]Name Class year Notability References
Geoff Bennett 2002 Washington reporter, Time Warner Cable News / NY1 [60]
Michael DeMond Davis 1961 Pulitzer Prize nominated journalist; author of Black American Women in Olympic Track & Field and co-author of Thurgood Marshall: Warrior at the Bar, Rebel on the Bench.  
Robert E. Johnson 1948 former Executive Editor and Associate Publisher, Jet Magazine  
Kevin A. Ross 1985 Host/producer of daytime syndication legal show America's Court with Judge Ross  
Jamal Simmons 1993 Political correspondent for CNN  
Vincent Tubbs c.1938 Co-founder of National Negro Newspaper Week and first African American to head a motion picture industry union [61][62]
  




Literature[edit]Name Class year Notability Reference(s)
Lerone Bennett, Jr. 1949 Senior editor for the Johnson Publishing Group (JET, Ebony); author Before the Mayflower  
Sanford Biggers 1993 Artist, Professor Columbia University School of the Arts  
Thomas Dent 1952 writer and poet; author Magnolia Street [63]
Jefferson Grisby 1938 author, artist; NAACP Man of the Year Award; first African American to publish a book for collegiate art teachers [41]
Miles Marshall Lewis 1993 Pop culture critic, essayist, and author  




Military service[edit]
Otha ThorntonName Class year Notability References
Otha Thornton, Lt. Colonel 1989 former Director of Human Resources and Presidential Communications Officer for the White House Communications Agency; Awarded an Honorary Doctorate degree by Michigan Technological University; former Assistant Professor, Michigan Technological University and Winner of the Parting of the Waters Award for Faculty Excellence.  
James R. Hall, Lt. General (ret.) 1957 Deputy Inspector General, the United States Army  
  




Religion[edit]Name Class year Notability Reference(s)
Keith L. Somerville 1992 Pastor, Calvary-Houston United Methodist Church  
M. William Howard, Jr. (minister) 1968 Pastor Bethany Baptist Church, former President New York Theological Seminary; Chair, Rutgers University Board of Governors [64]
Thomas Kilgore, Jr. 1931 Civil Rights pioneer and Pastor Emeritus, Second Baptist Church; a building is named in his honor on the Morehouse campus [64]
Otis Moss, Jr. 1956 Pastor and Theologian  
Otis Moss III 1992 Pastor, Trinity United Church of Christ; listed on the Root 100 [65]
Kelly Miller Smith 1942 assistant dean Vanderbilt University Divinity School (circa 1970s-1980s)  
Howard Thurman 1923 Renowned Theologian; Dean of Chapel Boston University  
Frederick B. Williams  Canon of the Church of the Intercession in Harlem, New York (1971-2005)  

Science and medicine[edit]
Mustafa Davis
Roger L. WoodName Class year Notability References
Henry W. Foster, Jr. 1954 President Emeritus, Meharry Medical College; Clinical Professor, Vanderbilt University; former nominee to post of U.S. Surgeon General; Presidential Advisor  
John Hopps, Jr. 1958 Physicist, former longtime Director of the Charles Stark Draper Laboratory and distinguished professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT); Recipient of the National Materials Advancement Award; former Deputy Under Secretary for the United States Department of Defense.  
Roger Wood II 1966 Computer Scientist; first African-American software developer at Bell Labs [66]
Calvin B. Johnson 1989 24th Secretary of Health for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania of the Pennsylvania Department of Health  
Paul Q. Judge 1998 Award winning computer technologist, inventor and entrepreneur;recipient of MIT Technology Review Magazine's "100 Top Innovators under 35" and voted Black Engineer of the Year (2006).  
Samuel M. Nabrit 1925 Distinguished Science Professor; first African-American appointed to the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission; served on Dwight Eisenhower's National Science Board; first African-American to receive a doctoral degree from Brown University; and first African-American to serve as Trustee at Brown University; President of Texas Southern University. [67]
Donald Hopkins 1962 Director and Vice President, Health Programs, The Carter Center; a 1995 MacArthur Fellow; Nominated for the Pulitzer Prize in 1983.  
Roderic Pettigrew 1972 Cardiologist and renowned Biomedical Engineer; Director, National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering; former Director of Magnetic Resonance Research and Professor of Radiology and Cardiology at Emory University School of Medicine; Listed annually among the "Best Doctors in America." [68]
Mack Roach III 1975 Chair, Radiation Oncology, University of California, San Francisco; named four times among the "Best Doctors in America"; American Cancer Society Fellow ; American College of Radiology Fellow  
Asa G. Yancey Sr. 1937 First African-American professor and Professor Emeritus at Emory University School of Medicine, first African-American doctor and Medical Director at Grady Memorial Hospital.  
Mustafa Davis 1997 Alum, Meharry Medical College; Associate Professor, Meharry Medical College [69]
  

Service and social reform[edit]
Civil Rights Leader Martin Luther King, Jr.Name Class year Notability Reference(s)
Hamilton Holmes 1963 Desegregated the University of Georgia (along with Charlayne Hunter). He first attended Morehouse before transferring to UGA [16]
Martin Luther King Jr. 1948 Leader of the Civil Rights movement and Nobel Peace Prize Laureate; delivered the historic I Have a Dream speech during the March on Washington 1963 [16]
Howard Zehr 1965 Grandfather of Restorative Justice; 2006 winner of the Community of Christ Peace Award; first White student to attend Morehouse  




Sports[edit]Olympics[edit]
Edwin Moses at the 1987 World ChampionshipName Class year Notability Reference(s)
Edwin Moses 1978 Olympic gold medalist [16]

Baseball[edit]Name Class year Notability Reference(s)
Donn Clendenon 1956 New York Mets Outfielder and 1969 World Series MVP  




Football (American)[edit]


Name Class year Notability Reference(s)
Jerome Boger  Current referee and umpire in the NFL (National Football League); former quarterback for the Morehouse Tigers football team  
Caesar "Zip" Gayles 1924 former head football coach and former head basketball coach at Langston University, Member of SWAC Hall of Fame and NAIA Basketball Hall of Fame [70]
David Graham 1982 DE, Seattle Seahawks 1982-1987 [71]
Ramon Harewood 2010 OL, Baltimore Ravens 2010 [71]
Issac Keys  LB, Arizona Cardinals 2004-2005 [71]
John David Washington 2006 RB, St. Louis Rams 2006, All-time leading rusher at Morehouse; RB in the UFL; son of Oscar Award winning actor Denzel Washington.  

Others[edit]Name Class year Notability References
John Sharpe James 1992 US Army Major, decorated veteran, member of Municipal Council of Newark [72]
Dexter King  son of Martin Luther King Jr.  
Ennis Cosby 1992 son of comedian Bill Cosby  
  

Notable faculty[edit]Name Department Notability Reference
Na'im Akbar  Author, Breaking the Chains and Images of Psychological Slavery  
Amalia Amaki  Modern and Contemporary Art  
Clayborne Carson  Executive Director, Martin Luther King Jr. Collection; Professor, Stanford University  
Lawrence Edward Carter  Dean, Martin Luther King Chapel; Fulbright Scholar; founder, the Gandhi-King-Ikeda Community Builders Prize  
Claude B. Dansby  Legendary chair, Mathematics Dept.  
Louis Delsarte  painter, muralist  
E. Franklin Frazier  Author, Black Bourgeoisie  
Kemper Harreld  Established the Morehouse College Glee Club  
J.K. Haynes  Chair, Biology Department; New York Academy of Science; Who's Who in Science and Engineering; Who's Who Among America's Teachers; Visiting Scholar Brown University  
John Hope (educator)  first black President of Morehouse  
John Hopps, Jr.  former Director, Charles Stark Draper Laboratory, MIT  
Edward A. Jones  Author, A Candle In The Dark: A History of Morehouse College  
Benjamin E. Mays  Mentor to Martin Luther King, Jr.; established the institutions international academic reputation and gave rise to the Morehouse Mystique  
Frederick E. Mapp  F.E. Mapp Science & Math Symposium  
Henry Cecil McBay  Winner of the Norton Prize in Chemistry, the Norris Award, and the Herty Award for Outstanding Contributions in Chemistry; 1st MLK Visiting Scholar at MIT  
Harriet J. Walton  "Mother Walton" was a UNCF Dana Fellow; Who's Who Men and Women of Science (1974); Who's Who of American Women (1974); Outstanding Educators of America (1971)  
Charles Wilbert Snow  Diplomat
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 18, 2014, 09:48:51 AM
you asked what? You have to understand that Getbig isnt my life as it is yours, i dont see everything....

and also that list is a small sample size. i didnt want to copy and paste the whole list which is why i included the link.
But because you refuse to click a link. Here are some others.

Academia[edit]Educators[edit]
Benjamin Brawley
James Nabrit, Jr.
Louis W. Sullivan, 17th Secretary of Health and Human ServicesName Class year Notability Reference(s)
Russell L Adams 1952 Chair, Department Afro-American Studies, Howard University (1971-2005); Professor Emeritus, Howard University  
Benjamin Brawley 1901 first Dean of Morehouse College  
Calvin O. Butts 1972 President, SUNY College at Old Westbury; Pastor, Abyssinian Baptist Church [1]
Ronald L. Carter 1971 President, Johnson C. Smith University; former Dean of Students Boston University and the University of the Witwatersrand in South Africa  
James A. Colston 1932 2nd President, Bethune-Cookman University; President Knoxville College; President Savannah State University; 2nd President Bronx Community College  
Samuel DuBois Cook 1948 first Black Professor Emeritus and Trustee Emeritus at Duke University; President Dillard University 1974-1997  
Charles D. Churchwell 1952 former Dean of Library Services at Washington University in St. Louis; Brown University and Miami University (OH)  
Guy C. Craft 1951 former Dean of Library Services at Chicago State University; former Library Director at Robert W. Woodruff Library of the Atlanta University Center and former Interim Dean of the School of Library and Information Studies at Clark Atlanta University  
Abraham L. Davis 1961 Distinguished Professor and Chair, Political Science Department, Morehouse College  
Mordecai Wyatt Johnson 1911 First African-American president of Howard University [2]
James C. Early 1969 Distinguished Director of Cultural Heritage Policy at the Smithsonian Institution Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage, Washington, D.C. [3]
Eddie Glaude 1989 Chair, Center for African American Studies and Professor at Princeton University; Guest Contributor: The Tavis Smiley Show [4]
Marshall Grigsby 1968 former President of Benedict College and former Vice President, Provost and CEO of Hampton University  
John Hopps, Jr. 1958 former Director of the Charles Stark Draper Laboratory and Distinguished Physics Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Recipient of the Materials Advancement Award  
David Jones 1983 Vice President of Human Resources, Stanford University  
Walter J. Leonard  former Assistant Dean Harvard Law School; former President of Fisk University; Two Fellowships are named in his honor at Oxford University [5]
James Nabrit, Jr. 1923 Second African-American president of Howard University and former Deputy United Nations Ambassador  
Calvin Mackie 1990 former Professor of Engineering, Tulane University; winner of the 2003 Presidential Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics and Engineering; Black Engineer of the Year for College Level Educators  
Walter E. Massey 1958 President, School of the Art Institute of Chicago; former Professor of Physics at the University of Chicago; former Dean of the College of Physics at Brown University; former Provost of the University of California System; President Emeritus at Morehouse College  
Richard McKinney 1931 first African American President of Storer College; former Dean at Virginia Union University and Morgan State University  
Richard J. Powell 1975 Distinguished Professor of Art History at Duke University; editor-in-chief, the Art Bulletin; Wilbur Lucius Cross Medalist, Yale University Alumni of the Year Award [6]
Ronald S. Sullivan Jr. 1989 Professor, Harvard Law School and Director of the Criminal Justice Inst. at Harvard Law; Legal Analysts CNN, Fox News  
James F. Williams  current Dean of Libraries University of Colorado at Boulder , 2002 Melvil Dewey Medal recipient  
Charles V. Willie 1948 Distinguished Professor Emeritus, Harvard University Graduate School of Education  
John S. Wilson, Jr. 1979 Executive Director of the White House Initiative on Historically Black Colleges and Universities; former Assistant Provost at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology [7]







Business[edit]
Herman Cain
Walter E. Massey
Robert L. Mallet former Deputy Secretary of Commerce former Vice President of PfizerName Class year Notability Reference(s)
Shaka Rasheed 1993 Managing Director, Lazard Asset Management  
Ronald D. Brown  former CEO, Atlanta Life Financial Group, Inc  
Nathaniel H. Bronner, Sr. 1940 founder and former CEO, Bronner Bros., which is also the publisher of Upscale Magazine  
Herman Cain 1967 former CEO, Godfather's Pizza [8]
Emmett Carson 1981 CEO and President, Silicon Valley Community Foundation  
James W. Compton 1961 Board of Directors, Ariel Investments, Inc.; retired President & CEO, Chicago Urban League  
Reginald E. Davis 1984 President, RBC Bank, former Sr. Executive, Wachovia; named one the 75 Most Powerful African-Americans in Corporate America by Black Enterprise magazine  
Russell Ewing 1991 Executive Director, SEI Investments Company.  
Dale E. Jones 1982 Vice Chair, Heidrick & Struggles International, Inc.  
Robert L. Mallett 1979 former Vice President, Pfizer Corporation, President Pfizer Foundation/Member of Accordia Global Health Foundation’s Board of Directors [9][10]
Walter E. Massey 1958 former Chairman, Bank of America; former Director of the National Science Foundation  
Kent Matlock 1986 CEO of Matlock Advertising & Public Relations  
John W. Mims 1982 Sr. Vice President Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide  
Arthur E. Johnson 1968 former President and COO, Lockheed Martin I&SS, and President, IBM, FSC Division  
Shaka Rasheed 1993 Managing Director, J.P.Morgan Asset Management  
Rufus H. Rivers 1986 Managing Director, RLJ Equity Partners, Board of Directors: Thomas & Betts, the National Association of Investment Companies (NAIC)  
Stephan B. Hall 2010 Founder & CEO, Mansa Education Group  
Robert T. Ross 1981 Director, NJ Wealth Management Banking at Merrill Lynch  
Maceo K. Sloan 1971 Chair & CEO NCM Capital Management Group and Chair & CEO Sloan Financial Group, Inc., Board of Directors, SCANA Corporation  




Entertainment[edit]


Music[edit]
Babatunde OlatunjiName Class year Notability References
Uzee Brown, Jr. 1972 Opera Singer, Composer  
Byron Cage 1987 Grammy Nominated Gospel Singer; NAACP Image Award nominee and winner of six Stellar Awards [11]
Keith "Guru" Elam 1983 (Group) Gang Starr, Rapper, pioneer [12]
Edmund Jenkins 1914 Harlem Renaissance Composer studied under Kemper Harreld  
Canton Jones 1985 Grammy nominated Gospel Singer  
Martin Luther McCoy 1992 musician and actor [13]
Babatunde Olatunji 1954 Grammy Award winning Nigerian drummer, social activist and recording artist; Drums of Passion. [14]
Shakir Stewart 1996 Senior Vice President of Island Def Jam Music Group and the Executive Vice President of Def Jam [15]
  




Film, television and theatre[edit]
Spike Lee
Samuel L. Jackson at a Los Angeles eventName Class year Notability Reference(s)
Samuel L. Jackson 1972 actor [16]
Erik King 1985 actor, "Dexter" [17]
Spike Lee 1979 film director and producer [16]
Seith Mann 1995 television director: The Wire, Grey's Anatomy; winner of the NAACP Image Award  
Bill G. Nunn III 1976 actor, School Daze, Mo Better Blues, New Jack City [18]
Avery O Williams 1986 screenwriter; Notes In A Minor Key, Re-Directing Eddie [19]
Stu James 1989 Broadway and television actor; Color Purple, Dreamgirls, All My Children, General Hospital [20]
Rockmond Dunbar  actor, Soul Food, Girlfriends  




Government, law, and public policy[edit]Federal government[edit]
Congressman Sanford Bishop
Earl Hilliard, fmr. Congressman
Congressman Major Owens
David Satcher, former U.S. Surgeon GeneralName Class year Notability Reference(s)
Sanford Bishop 1968 U.S. Congressman (Georgia) [21]
John Brewer 1989 Associate Administrator, Foreign Agricultural Services and General Sales Manager, United States Department of Agriculture [22]
Julius E. Coles 1964 former U.S. Ambassador to Senegal; former President Africare  
George Haley 1949 former Chair U.S. Postal Rate Commission and Ambassador to the Republic of Ghana; brother of Alex Haley [23]
James L. Hudson 1961 Director of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development; Chair, National Capitol Revitalization Corporation Board [24]
Earl F. Hilliard 1964 former U.S. Congressman (Alabama) [25]
John Hopps Jr. 1958 former Deputy Under Secretary United States Department of Defense [26]
Howard E. Jeter 1970 former U.S. Ambassador to Nigeria; former U.S. Ambassador to Botswana  
James Nabrit, Jr. 1923 former Deputy U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations; second African American President of Howard University [25]
Robert L. Mallett 1979 former Deputy Secretary of Commerce U.S. Department of Commerce; VP Pfizer Corporation, President Pfizer Foundation [9]
Major R. Owens 1956 U.S. Congressman (New York) [27]
Cedric Richmond 1995 U.S. Congressman (Louisiana)  
David Satcher 1963 16th U.S. Surgeon General, former president of Morehouse School of Medicine [28]
Joel Secundy 1993 Deputy Assistant Secretary, Service Industries, International Trade Administrations, United States Department of Commerce [29]
Louis W. Sullivan 1954 former U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services and current President Emeritus of Morehouse School of Medicine [30]
Horace T. Ward 1927 First African American to challenge the racially discriminatory practices at the University of Georgia (UGA) School of Law. First African-American to be appointed to the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia, and former member of the Georgia Senate [31]
Nate Bennett-Fleming 2007 shadow U.S. Representative for the District of Columbia [32][33]




State government[edit]
Julian BondName Class year Notability Reference(s)
Julian Bond 1971 Civil rights leader, former Georgia state representative & Chairman of the NAACP [16]
Terrance Carroll 1992 Speaker, Colorado House of Representatives  
Kenneth Dunkin 1989 Illinois House of Representatives  
Leroy Johnson 1949 Senator; first African American elected to the Georgia General Assembly since Reconstruction [34]
John Monds 1987 Highest number of votes received by any Libertarian candidate ever [35]
Frank Peterman 1985 Florida House of Representatives  
Bakari Sellers 2005 Youngest member elected to the South Carolina General Assembly [36]
Andre Thapedi 1990 Illinois House of Representatives  
Perry Thurston Jr. 1982 Florida House of Representatives  
S. Howard Woodson 1942 Bachelor of Divinity Morehouse School of Religion; former Speaker, New Jersey General Assembly  




Mayors[edit]
John Wesley Dobbs
Maynard JacksonName Class year Notability References
Claude Black Jr. 1937 first Black mayor Pro Tem San Antonio, Texas; Civil Rights Leader; Pastor Mt. Zion Baptist Church, San Antonio, Texas [37][38]
Chuck Burris 1971 first Black mayor of Stone Mountain, Georgia  
John Wesley Dobbs 1897 the unofficial "Mayor" of Sweet Auburn Avenue (1937-1949); Civic Leader and co-founder of the Atlanta Negro Voters League [39]
Maynard Jackson 1956 first Black mayor of Atlanta, Georgia; Jackson served three terms as Mayor; founder and CEO of Jackson Securities Inc.; National Development Chair, Democratic National Committee [40]
Ed McIntyre 1956 first African-American mayor of Augusta,GA  
Alvin Parks, Jr. 1983 Mayor, East St. Louis, IL (2007- Present)  
James O. Webb 1953 Mayor Glencoe, Illinois; established the first HMO in Illinois and served as Chair, President and CEO of the Dental Network of America (of the Health Care Service Corporation) [41]
Clinton I. Young 1972 Mayor, Mt. Vernon, NY (2008- Present)  
  




Judges and lawyers[edit]
George W. Crockett, Jr.
Reginald C. Lindsay
Jeh JohnsonName Class year Notability References
Michael D. Carter 1986 Judge, Superior Court, Los Angeles County [42]
George W. Crockett Jr. 1931 former U.S. Congressman, United States Congress; Founding Member of the National Lawyer's Guild; Co-founded the first racially integrated law firm in the U.S.; first Black attorney in the U.S. Department of Labor [43]
Ralph B. Everett 1973 President and CEO, Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies [44]
Joseph Jerome Farris 1951 Justice, United States Court of Appeals 9th Circuit [45]
Robert V. Franklin 1947 Retired Judge, Ohio District Court of Appeals.  
Odell Horton 1951 Justice, U.S. District Court W. Tenn. [46]
Reginald C. Lindsay 1967 Justice, United States Court of Appeals 7th Circuit [47]
James L. Hudson 1961 Director of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development; Chair, National Capitol Revitalization Corporation Board [24]
Michael D. Johnson 1990 Judge, Superior Court, Fulton Co., Georgia [48]
Jeh Johnson 1979 Secretary of Homeland Security, first black Partner, Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP, named to the National Law Journal's 50 Most Influential Minority Lawyers; appointed General Counsel for the Defense Department by President Barack Obama; former General Counsel U.S. Air Force.  
C. Vernon Mason 1967 disbarred lawyer, Tawana Brawley case, Howard Beach incident.  
Stephen L. Maxwell 1942 first Black District Court Judge in Minnesota [49]
Tyrone C. Means 1973 Founding Partner, Thomas Means Gillis & Seay; Counsel and Board Member, Martin Luther King Jr. National Memorial Project Foundation [50][51]
Graham T. Perry c.1920 First African American Assistant Attorney-General for State of Illinois [52]
Olu Stevens 1992 Circuit Court Judge for the 30th Circuit KY [53]
Thomas Sampson Sr. 1968 founding Partner of Thompson Kennedy Sampson & Patterson, the oldest minority-owned law firm in the state of Georgia. [54][55]
Jerome Walker 1981 Partner Troutman Sanders, LLP; former General Counsel for the Hong Kong & Shanghai Banking Corp. Ltd. [56]
Horace T. Ward 1949 Federal Judge, U.S. District Court Northern, Georgia; Inducted into the National Bar Association Hall of Fame and recipient of the Trumpet Award for Civil Rights Advocacy [57]
Brent Wilson 1973 Partner, Elarbee Thompson Sapp & Wilson; Who's Who in American Law; Listed among America's Top Black Lawyers by Black Enterprise ; Chamber's USA Best Lawyers for Business. [58]
Richard T. White 1967 Sr. VP and General Counsel for the Auto Club Group and Chairman of the Association of Corporate Counsel [59]
  

Journalist and media personalities[edit]Name Class year Notability References
Geoff Bennett 2002 Washington reporter, Time Warner Cable News / NY1 [60]
Michael DeMond Davis 1961 Pulitzer Prize nominated journalist; author of Black American Women in Olympic Track & Field and co-author of Thurgood Marshall: Warrior at the Bar, Rebel on the Bench.  
Robert E. Johnson 1948 former Executive Editor and Associate Publisher, Jet Magazine  
Kevin A. Ross 1985 Host/producer of daytime syndication legal show America's Court with Judge Ross  
Jamal Simmons 1993 Political correspondent for CNN  
Vincent Tubbs c.1938 Co-founder of National Negro Newspaper Week and first African American to head a motion picture industry union [61][62]
  




Literature[edit]Name Class year Notability Reference(s)
Lerone Bennett, Jr. 1949 Senior editor for the Johnson Publishing Group (JET, Ebony); author Before the Mayflower  
Sanford Biggers 1993 Artist, Professor Columbia University School of the Arts  
Thomas Dent 1952 writer and poet; author Magnolia Street [63]
Jefferson Grisby 1938 author, artist; NAACP Man of the Year Award; first African American to publish a book for collegiate art teachers [41]
Miles Marshall Lewis 1993 Pop culture critic, essayist, and author  




Military service[edit]
Otha ThorntonName Class year Notability References
Otha Thornton, Lt. Colonel 1989 former Director of Human Resources and Presidential Communications Officer for the White House Communications Agency; Awarded an Honorary Doctorate degree by Michigan Technological University; former Assistant Professor, Michigan Technological University and Winner of the Parting of the Waters Award for Faculty Excellence.  
James R. Hall, Lt. General (ret.) 1957 Deputy Inspector General, the United States Army  
  




Religion[edit]Name Class year Notability Reference(s)
Keith L. Somerville 1992 Pastor, Calvary-Houston United Methodist Church  
M. William Howard, Jr. (minister) 1968 Pastor Bethany Baptist Church, former President New York Theological Seminary; Chair, Rutgers University Board of Governors [64]
Thomas Kilgore, Jr. 1931 Civil Rights pioneer and Pastor Emeritus, Second Baptist Church; a building is named in his honor on the Morehouse campus [64]
Otis Moss, Jr. 1956 Pastor and Theologian  
Otis Moss III 1992 Pastor, Trinity United Church of Christ; listed on the Root 100 [65]
Kelly Miller Smith 1942 assistant dean Vanderbilt University Divinity School (circa 1970s-1980s)  
Howard Thurman 1923 Renowned Theologian; Dean of Chapel Boston University  
Frederick B. Williams  Canon of the Church of the Intercession in Harlem, New York (1971-2005)  

Science and medicine[edit]
Mustafa Davis
Roger L. WoodName Class year Notability References
Henry W. Foster, Jr. 1954 President Emeritus, Meharry Medical College; Clinical Professor, Vanderbilt University; former nominee to post of U.S. Surgeon General; Presidential Advisor  
John Hopps, Jr. 1958 Physicist, former longtime Director of the Charles Stark Draper Laboratory and distinguished professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT); Recipient of the National Materials Advancement Award; former Deputy Under Secretary for the United States Department of Defense.  
Roger Wood II 1966 Computer Scientist; first African-American software developer at Bell Labs [66]
Calvin B. Johnson 1989 24th Secretary of Health for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania of the Pennsylvania Department of Health  
Paul Q. Judge 1998 Award winning computer technologist, inventor and entrepreneur;recipient of MIT Technology Review Magazine's "100 Top Innovators under 35" and voted Black Engineer of the Year (2006).  
Samuel M. Nabrit 1925 Distinguished Science Professor; first African-American appointed to the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission; served on Dwight Eisenhower's National Science Board; first African-American to receive a doctoral degree from Brown University; and first African-American to serve as Trustee at Brown University; President of Texas Southern University. [67]
Donald Hopkins 1962 Director and Vice President, Health Programs, The Carter Center; a 1995 MacArthur Fellow; Nominated for the Pulitzer Prize in 1983.  
Roderic Pettigrew 1972 Cardiologist and renowned Biomedical Engineer; Director, National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering; former Director of Magnetic Resonance Research and Professor of Radiology and Cardiology at Emory University School of Medicine; Listed annually among the "Best Doctors in America." [68]
Mack Roach III 1975 Chair, Radiation Oncology, University of California, San Francisco; named four times among the "Best Doctors in America"; American Cancer Society Fellow ; American College of Radiology Fellow  
Asa G. Yancey Sr. 1937 First African-American professor and Professor Emeritus at Emory University School of Medicine, first African-American doctor and Medical Director at Grady Memorial Hospital.  
Mustafa Davis 1997 Alum, Meharry Medical College; Associate Professor, Meharry Medical College [69]
  

Service and social reform[edit]
Civil Rights Leader Martin Luther King, Jr.Name Class year Notability Reference(s)
Hamilton Holmes 1963 Desegregated the University of Georgia (along with Charlayne Hunter). He first attended Morehouse before transferring to UGA [16]
Martin Luther King Jr. 1948 Leader of the Civil Rights movement and Nobel Peace Prize Laureate; delivered the historic I Have a Dream speech during the March on Washington 1963 [16]
Howard Zehr 1965 Grandfather of Restorative Justice; 2006 winner of the Community of Christ Peace Award; first White student to attend Morehouse  




Sports[edit]Olympics[edit]
Edwin Moses at the 1987 World ChampionshipName Class year Notability Reference(s)
Edwin Moses 1978 Olympic gold medalist [16]

Baseball[edit]Name Class year Notability Reference(s)
Donn Clendenon 1956 New York Mets Outfielder and 1969 World Series MVP  




Football (American)[edit]


Name Class year Notability Reference(s)
Jerome Boger  Current referee and umpire in the NFL (National Football League); former quarterback for the Morehouse Tigers football team  
Caesar "Zip" Gayles 1924 former head football coach and former head basketball coach at Langston University, Member of SWAC Hall of Fame and NAIA Basketball Hall of Fame [70]
David Graham 1982 DE, Seattle Seahawks 1982-1987 [71]
Ramon Harewood 2010 OL, Baltimore Ravens 2010 [71]
Issac Keys  LB, Arizona Cardinals 2004-2005 [71]
John David Washington 2006 RB, St. Louis Rams 2006, All-time leading rusher at Morehouse; RB in the UFL; son of Oscar Award winning actor Denzel Washington.  

Others[edit]Name Class year Notability References
John Sharpe James 1992 US Army Major, decorated veteran, member of Municipal Council of Newark [72]
Dexter King  son of Martin Luther King Jr.  
Ennis Cosby 1992 son of comedian Bill Cosby  
  

Notable faculty[edit]Name Department Notability Reference
Na'im Akbar  Author, Breaking the Chains and Images of Psychological Slavery  
Amalia Amaki  Modern and Contemporary Art  
Clayborne Carson  Executive Director, Martin Luther King Jr. Collection; Professor, Stanford University  
Lawrence Edward Carter  Dean, Martin Luther King Chapel; Fulbright Scholar; founder, the Gandhi-King-Ikeda Community Builders Prize  
Claude B. Dansby  Legendary chair, Mathematics Dept.  
Louis Delsarte  painter, muralist  
E. Franklin Frazier  Author, Black Bourgeoisie  
Kemper Harreld  Established the Morehouse College Glee Club  
J.K. Haynes  Chair, Biology Department; New York Academy of Science; Who's Who in Science and Engineering; Who's Who Among America's Teachers; Visiting Scholar Brown University  
John Hope (educator)  first black President of Morehouse  
John Hopps, Jr.  former Director, Charles Stark Draper Laboratory, MIT  
Edward A. Jones  Author, A Candle In The Dark: A History of Morehouse College  
Benjamin E. Mays  Mentor to Martin Luther King, Jr.; established the institutions international academic reputation and gave rise to the Morehouse Mystique  
Frederick E. Mapp  F.E. Mapp Science & Math Symposium  
Henry Cecil McBay  Winner of the Norton Prize in Chemistry, the Norris Award, and the Herty Award for Outstanding Contributions in Chemistry; 1st MLK Visiting Scholar at MIT  
Harriet J. Walton  "Mother Walton" was a UNCF Dana Fellow; Who's Who Men and Women of Science (1974); Who's Who of American Women (1974); Outstanding Educators of America (1971)  
Charles Wilbert Snow  Diplomat


I could tell immediately.  This would also explain why you're going to medical school in a foreign country.   You can list as many people as you like but the fact is Hebrew U's are academically inferior and corrupt.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 18, 2014, 09:51:13 AM
So step up and donate your $ to keep it alive?  What - oh that's right - economy under Obama is so bad even black Colleges that they are folding too.

Face it - your messiah Preezy - who you voted for 2x over - nothing survives his economic destruction and chaos. 

I went to a black college

Morehouse College

Hermain Cain went there too, as well as Martin Luther the King, Edwin Moses, Samuel L Jackson, Spike Lee

well heres the wiki

Morehouse alumni include notable African-Americans such as: Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., theologian Howard Thurman, businessman and former Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain, filmmaker Spike Lee, filmmaker Robert G. Christie (a.k.a. Bobby Garcia), actor Samuel L. Jackson, polymath and creative genius Stephan B. Hall, Gang Starr rapper Guru, Olympic gold medalist Edwin Moses, Lloyd McNeill, Jazz flutist, USPS Kwanza Stamp designer, the first recipient of Howard University's MFA Degree, former Bank of America Chairman Walter E. Massey, the first African-American mayor of Atlanta Maynard Jackson, Major League Baseball first baseman and 1969 World Series MVP Donn Clendenon, former Secretary of Health and Human Services Louis W. Sullivan, and former United States Surgeon General David Satcher.

According to Morehouse's own "About Us" page, Morehouse was the first historically black college to produce a Rhodes Scholar. The school's first Rhodes Scholar, Nima Warfield, was named in 1994, the second, Christopher Elders, in 2001.[49] A third, Oluwabusayo "Topé" Folarin, was named in 2004. Morehouse has been home to seven Fulbright Scholars, Damon M. Lombard (1995), John Thomas (2004), Jason T. Garrett (2006), Morgan C. Williams, Jr. (2006), Lasean Brown (2008), Eric R. Baylor (2008) and Wendell H. Marsh (2009).[50][51]

Since 1999, Morehouse has produced five Marshall Scholars, five Luce Scholars, four Watson Fellows and 2010 White House Fellow, Erich Caulfield.[52][53] Previous Watson Fellows include, Craig Marberry '81, Kenneth Flowers '83 and Lynn P. Harrison III '79.


Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Option D on December 18, 2014, 09:57:22 AM
So step up and donate your $ to keep it alive?  What - oh that's right - economy under Obama is so bad even black Colleges that they are folding too.

Face it - your messiah Preezy - who you voted for 2x over - nothing survives his economic destruction and chaos. 


lol really bro?

Keep what alive?
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Option D on December 18, 2014, 09:59:57 AM
I could tell immediately.  This would also explain why you're going to medical school in a foreign country.   You can list as many people as you like but the fact is Hebrew U's are academically inferior and corrupt.

Wowzers, so many flaws and inconsistencies in this small post....

Son... just stop, you know so very little.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 18, 2014, 10:07:11 AM
lol really bro?

Keep what alive?

The college that is going under in the failed Obama economy.  But heck - you can now buy some Cubans so its all good right? 

Personally - I am laughing at just how much the "community" is willing to tolerate under Obama Admn just because he is 1/2 black.  Its actually hilarious to watch this b/c even the most racist southern cracka from Mississippi could not do as much damage to the community as Obama has and still does and yet you all foolishly keep supporting it.

Good job   
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Option D on December 18, 2014, 10:08:02 AM
The college that is going under in the failed Obama economy.  But heck - you can now buy some Cubans so its all good right? 

Personally - I am laughing at just how much the "community" is willing to tolerate under Obama Admn just because he is 1/2 black.  Its actually hilarious to watch this b/c even the most racist southern cracka from Mississippi could not do as much damage to the community as Obama has and still does and yet you all foolishly keep supporting it.

Good job   

um ok bro..thats cool
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: nighttrain on December 18, 2014, 10:12:15 AM
Wowzers, so many flaws and inconsistencies in this small post....

Son... just stop, you know so very little.

lol. I bet your MCAT was an 18 if you have to resort to going to an overseas medical school.



lulz
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: SF1900 on December 18, 2014, 10:17:25 AM
lol. I bet your MCAT was an 18 if you have to resort to going to an overseas medical school.



lulz

Many people who do not get into America or European Medical schools will often go overseas. I mean, come on, who would turn down Harvard or Columbia Medical school to go to an overseas school? :-\ :-\
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 18, 2014, 10:25:39 AM
Many people who do not get into America or European Medical schools will often go overseas. I mean, come on, who would turn down Harvard or Columbia Medical school to go to an overseas school? :-\ :-\

Only someone with a really low score.  Blacks are already accepted into U.S. medical schools with lower scores.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: LittleJ on December 18, 2014, 10:30:57 AM
Only someone with a really low score.  Blacks are already accepted into U.S. medical schools with lower scores.


What college did you graduate from???
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 18, 2014, 10:31:43 AM
What college did you graduate from???

University of Michigan.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: LittleJ on December 18, 2014, 10:33:38 AM
University of Michigan.

lol you can't be serious
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 18, 2014, 10:34:39 AM
lol you can't be serious

You must be another proud graduate of Hebrew U. 
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: SF1900 on December 18, 2014, 10:39:23 AM
lol you can't be serious

You're an idiot.

University of Michigan is a solid school.

It was ranked #29 across National Universities.

Also, The University of Michigan Hospitals and Health Centers is ranked among the top hospitals in the country.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: LittleJ on December 18, 2014, 10:43:37 AM
You must be another proud graduate of Hebrew U. 

No I went to UA  :-*
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 18, 2014, 10:45:43 AM
No I went to UA  :-*

Almost as bad.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: dr.chimps on December 18, 2014, 10:46:01 AM
One thread. And a dogpile of idiots.  ;D
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 18, 2014, 10:47:50 AM
One thread. And a dogpile of idiots.  ;D

And you're the old wrinkly cherry on top
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Devon97 on December 18, 2014, 10:51:46 AM
I went to a black college

Morehouse College

Hermain Cain went there too, as well as Martin Luther the King, Edwin Moses, Samuel L Jackson, Spike Lee

well heres the wiki

Morehouse alumni include notable African-Americans such as: Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., theologian Howard Thurman, businessman and former Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain, filmmaker Spike Lee, filmmaker Robert G. Christie (a.k.a. Bobby Garcia), actor Samuel L. Jackson, polymath and creative genius Stephan B. Hall, Gang Starr rapper Guru, Olympic gold medalist Edwin Moses, Lloyd McNeill, Jazz flutist, USPS Kwanza Stamp designer, the first recipient of Howard University's MFA Degree, former Bank of America Chairman Walter E. Massey, the first African-American mayor of Atlanta Maynard Jackson, Major League Baseball first baseman and 1969 World Series MVP Donn Clendenon, former Secretary of Health and Human Services Louis W. Sullivan, and former United States Surgeon General David Satcher.

According to Morehouse's own "About Us" page, Morehouse was the first historically black college to produce a Rhodes Scholar. The school's first Rhodes Scholar, Nima Warfield, was named in 1994, the second, Christopher Elders, in 2001.[49] A third, Oluwabusayo "Topé" Folarin, was named in 2004. Morehouse has been home to seven Fulbright Scholars, Damon M. Lombard (1995), John Thomas (2004), Jason T. Garrett (2006), Morgan C. Williams, Jr. (2006), Lasean Brown (2008), Eric R. Baylor (2008) and Wendell H. Marsh (2009).[50][51]

Since 1999, Morehouse has produced five Marshall Scholars, five Luce Scholars, four Watson Fellows and 2010 White House Fellow, Erich Caulfield.[52][53] Previous Watson Fellows include, Craig Marberry '81, Kenneth Flowers '83 and Lynn P. Harrison III '79.


You left out their Valedictorian was white.
 ;D ;D ;D ;D

http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/05/16/white.valedictorian/ (http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/05/16/white.valedictorian/)

I swear, it's like taking candy from a baby... ;)

Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: LittleJ on December 18, 2014, 10:53:11 AM
Almost as bad.

No, you'd fit in just right. They hate Hebrews just as much as you do, but cheer for them every Saturday.  :)
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 18, 2014, 10:55:39 AM
No, you'd fit in just right. They hate Hebrews just as much as you do, but cheer for them every Saturday.  :)

Blah blah blah.  You keep saying I hate blacks but never prove it.  All I'm doing in bringing a little reality into your life.  You've called me racial slurs on multiple occasions.  I've never once used a racial slur.  Evidence seems to indicate you're the racist one.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 18, 2014, 11:00:56 AM
No I went to UA  :-*

University of Attica State Prison - we know 
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: oldgolds on December 18, 2014, 11:01:41 AM
you asked what? You have to understand that Getbig isnt my life as it is yours, i dont see everything....

and also that list is a small sample size. i didnt want to copy and paste the whole list which is why i included the link.
But because you refuse to click a link. Here are some others.

Academia[edit]Educators[edit]
Benjamin Brawley
James Nabrit, Jr.
Louis W. Sullivan, 17th Secretary of Health and Human ServicesName Class year Notability Reference(s)
Russell L Adams 1952 Chair, Department Afro-American Studies, Howard University (1971-2005); Professor Emeritus, Howard University  
Benjamin Brawley 1901 first Dean of Morehouse College  
Calvin O. Butts 1972 President, SUNY College at Old Westbury; Pastor, Abyssinian Baptist Church [1]
Ronald L. Carter 1971 President, Johnson C. Smith University; former Dean of Students Boston University and the University of the Witwatersrand in South Africa  
James A. Colston 1932 2nd President, Bethune-Cookman University; President Knoxville College; President Savannah State University; 2nd President Bronx Community College  
Samuel DuBois Cook 1948 first Black Professor Emeritus and Trustee Emeritus at Duke University; President Dillard University 1974-1997  
Charles D. Churchwell 1952 former Dean of Library Services at Washington University in St. Louis; Brown University and Miami University (OH)  
Guy C. Craft 1951 former Dean of Library Services at Chicago State University; former Library Director at Robert W. Woodruff Library of the Atlanta University Center and former Interim Dean of the School of Library and Information Studies at Clark Atlanta University  
Abraham L. Davis 1961 Distinguished Professor and Chair, Political Science Department, Morehouse College  
Mordecai Wyatt Johnson 1911 First African-American president of Howard University [2]
James C. Early 1969 Distinguished Director of Cultural Heritage Policy at the Smithsonian Institution Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage, Washington, D.C. [3]
Eddie Glaude 1989 Chair, Center for African American Studies and Professor at Princeton University; Guest Contributor: The Tavis Smiley Show [4]
Marshall Grigsby 1968 former President of Benedict College and former Vice President, Provost and CEO of Hampton University  
John Hopps, Jr. 1958 former Director of the Charles Stark Draper Laboratory and Distinguished Physics Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Recipient of the Materials Advancement Award  
David Jones 1983 Vice President of Human Resources, Stanford University  
Walter J. Leonard  former Assistant Dean Harvard Law School; former President of Fisk University; Two Fellowships are named in his honor at Oxford University [5]
James Nabrit, Jr. 1923 Second African-American president of Howard University and former Deputy United Nations Ambassador  
Calvin Mackie 1990 former Professor of Engineering, Tulane University; winner of the 2003 Presidential Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics and Engineering; Black Engineer of the Year for College Level Educators  
Walter E. Massey 1958 President, School of the Art Institute of Chicago; former Professor of Physics at the University of Chicago; former Dean of the College of Physics at Brown University; former Provost of the University of California System; President Emeritus at Morehouse College  
Richard McKinney 1931 first African American President of Storer College; former Dean at Virginia Union University and Morgan State University  
Richard J. Powell 1975 Distinguished Professor of Art History at Duke University; editor-in-chief, the Art Bulletin; Wilbur Lucius Cross Medalist, Yale University Alumni of the Year Award [6]
Ronald S. Sullivan Jr. 1989 Professor, Harvard Law School and Director of the Criminal Justice Inst. at Harvard Law; Legal Analysts CNN, Fox News  
James F. Williams  current Dean of Libraries University of Colorado at Boulder , 2002 Melvil Dewey Medal recipient  
Charles V. Willie 1948 Distinguished Professor Emeritus, Harvard University Graduate School of Education  
John S. Wilson, Jr. 1979 Executive Director of the White House Initiative on Historically Black Colleges and Universities; former Assistant Provost at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology [7]







Business[edit]
Herman Cain
Walter E. Massey
Robert L. Mallet former Deputy Secretary of Commerce former Vice President of PfizerName Class year Notability Reference(s)
Shaka Rasheed 1993 Managing Director, Lazard Asset Management  
Ronald D. Brown  former CEO, Atlanta Life Financial Group, Inc  
Nathaniel H. Bronner, Sr. 1940 founder and former CEO, Bronner Bros., which is also the publisher of Upscale Magazine  
Herman Cain 1967 former CEO, Godfather's Pizza [8]
Emmett Carson 1981 CEO and President, Silicon Valley Community Foundation  
James W. Compton 1961 Board of Directors, Ariel Investments, Inc.; retired President & CEO, Chicago Urban League  
Reginald E. Davis 1984 President, RBC Bank, former Sr. Executive, Wachovia; named one the 75 Most Powerful African-Americans in Corporate America by Black Enterprise magazine  
Russell Ewing 1991 Executive Director, SEI Investments Company.  
Dale E. Jones 1982 Vice Chair, Heidrick & Struggles International, Inc.  
Robert L. Mallett 1979 former Vice President, Pfizer Corporation, President Pfizer Foundation/Member of Accordia Global Health Foundation’s Board of Directors [9][10]
Walter E. Massey 1958 former Chairman, Bank of America; former Director of the National Science Foundation  
Kent Matlock 1986 CEO of Matlock Advertising & Public Relations  
John W. Mims 1982 Sr. Vice President Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide  
Arthur E. Johnson 1968 former President and COO, Lockheed Martin I&SS, and President, IBM, FSC Division  
Shaka Rasheed 1993 Managing Director, J.P.Morgan Asset Management  
Rufus H. Rivers 1986 Managing Director, RLJ Equity Partners, Board of Directors: Thomas & Betts, the National Association of Investment Companies (NAIC)  
Stephan B. Hall 2010 Founder & CEO, Mansa Education Group  
Robert T. Ross 1981 Director, NJ Wealth Management Banking at Merrill Lynch  
Maceo K. Sloan 1971 Chair & CEO NCM Capital Management Group and Chair & CEO Sloan Financial Group, Inc., Board of Directors, SCANA Corporation  




Entertainment[edit]


Music[edit]
Babatunde OlatunjiName Class year Notability References
Uzee Brown, Jr. 1972 Opera Singer, Composer  
Byron Cage 1987 Grammy Nominated Gospel Singer; NAACP Image Award nominee and winner of six Stellar Awards [11]
Keith "Guru" Elam 1983 (Group) Gang Starr, Rapper, pioneer [12]
Edmund Jenkins 1914 Harlem Renaissance Composer studied under Kemper Harreld  
Canton Jones 1985 Grammy nominated Gospel Singer  
Martin Luther McCoy 1992 musician and actor [13]
Babatunde Olatunji 1954 Grammy Award winning Nigerian drummer, social activist and recording artist; Drums of Passion. [14]
Shakir Stewart 1996 Senior Vice President of Island Def Jam Music Group and the Executive Vice President of Def Jam [15]
  




Film, television and theatre[edit]
Spike Lee
Samuel L. Jackson at a Los Angeles eventName Class year Notability Reference(s)
Samuel L. Jackson 1972 actor [16]
Erik King 1985 actor, "Dexter" [17]
Spike Lee 1979 film director and producer [16]
Seith Mann 1995 television director: The Wire, Grey's Anatomy; winner of the NAACP Image Award  
Bill G. Nunn III 1976 actor, School Daze, Mo Better Blues, New Jack City [18]
Avery O Williams 1986 screenwriter; Notes In A Minor Key, Re-Directing Eddie [19]
Stu James 1989 Broadway and television actor; Color Purple, Dreamgirls, All My Children, General Hospital [20]
Rockmond Dunbar  actor, Soul Food, Girlfriends  




Government, law, and public policy[edit]Federal government[edit]
Congressman Sanford Bishop
Earl Hilliard, fmr. Congressman
Congressman Major Owens
David Satcher, former U.S. Surgeon GeneralName Class year Notability Reference(s)
Sanford Bishop 1968 U.S. Congressman (Georgia) [21]
John Brewer 1989 Associate Administrator, Foreign Agricultural Services and General Sales Manager, United States Department of Agriculture [22]
Julius E. Coles 1964 former U.S. Ambassador to Senegal; former President Africare  
George Haley 1949 former Chair U.S. Postal Rate Commission and Ambassador to the Republic of Ghana; brother of Alex Haley [23]
James L. Hudson 1961 Director of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development; Chair, National Capitol Revitalization Corporation Board [24]
Earl F. Hilliard 1964 former U.S. Congressman (Alabama) [25]
John Hopps Jr. 1958 former Deputy Under Secretary United States Department of Defense [26]
Howard E. Jeter 1970 former U.S. Ambassador to Nigeria; former U.S. Ambassador to Botswana  
James Nabrit, Jr. 1923 former Deputy U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations; second African American President of Howard University [25]
Robert L. Mallett 1979 former Deputy Secretary of Commerce U.S. Department of Commerce; VP Pfizer Corporation, President Pfizer Foundation [9]
Major R. Owens 1956 U.S. Congressman (New York) [27]
Cedric Richmond 1995 U.S. Congressman (Louisiana)  
David Satcher 1963 16th U.S. Surgeon General, former president of Morehouse School of Medicine [28]
Joel Secundy 1993 Deputy Assistant Secretary, Service Industries, International Trade Administrations, United States Department of Commerce [29]
Louis W. Sullivan 1954 former U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services and current President Emeritus of Morehouse School of Medicine [30]
Horace T. Ward 1927 First African American to challenge the racially discriminatory practices at the University of Georgia (UGA) School of Law. First African-American to be appointed to the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia, and former member of the Georgia Senate [31]
Nate Bennett-Fleming 2007 shadow U.S. Representative for the District of Columbia [32][33]




State government[edit]
Julian BondName Class year Notability Reference(s)
Julian Bond 1971 Civil rights leader, former Georgia state representative & Chairman of the NAACP [16]
Terrance Carroll 1992 Speaker, Colorado House of Representatives  
Kenneth Dunkin 1989 Illinois House of Representatives  
Leroy Johnson 1949 Senator; first African American elected to the Georgia General Assembly since Reconstruction [34]
John Monds 1987 Highest number of votes received by any Libertarian candidate ever [35]
Frank Peterman 1985 Florida House of Representatives  
Bakari Sellers 2005 Youngest member elected to the South Carolina General Assembly [36]
Andre Thapedi 1990 Illinois House of Representatives  
Perry Thurston Jr. 1982 Florida House of Representatives  
S. Howard Woodson 1942 Bachelor of Divinity Morehouse School of Religion; former Speaker, New Jersey General Assembly  




Mayors[edit]
John Wesley Dobbs
Maynard JacksonName Class year Notability References
Claude Black Jr. 1937 first Black mayor Pro Tem San Antonio, Texas; Civil Rights Leader; Pastor Mt. Zion Baptist Church, San Antonio, Texas [37][38]
Chuck Burris 1971 first Black mayor of Stone Mountain, Georgia  
John Wesley Dobbs 1897 the unofficial "Mayor" of Sweet Auburn Avenue (1937-1949); Civic Leader and co-founder of the Atlanta Negro Voters League [39]
Maynard Jackson 1956 first Black mayor of Atlanta, Georgia; Jackson served three terms as Mayor; founder and CEO of Jackson Securities Inc.; National Development Chair, Democratic National Committee [40]
Ed McIntyre 1956 first African-American mayor of Augusta,GA  
Alvin Parks, Jr. 1983 Mayor, East St. Louis, IL (2007- Present)  
James O. Webb 1953 Mayor Glencoe, Illinois; established the first HMO in Illinois and served as Chair, President and CEO of the Dental Network of America (of the Health Care Service Corporation) [41]
Clinton I. Young 1972 Mayor, Mt. Vernon, NY (2008- Present)  
  




Judges and lawyers[edit]
George W. Crockett, Jr.
Reginald C. Lindsay
Jeh JohnsonName Class year Notability References
Michael D. Carter 1986 Judge, Superior Court, Los Angeles County [42]
George W. Crockett Jr. 1931 former U.S. Congressman, United States Congress; Founding Member of the National Lawyer's Guild; Co-founded the first racially integrated law firm in the U.S.; first Black attorney in the U.S. Department of Labor [43]
Ralph B. Everett 1973 President and CEO, Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies [44]
Joseph Jerome Farris 1951 Justice, United States Court of Appeals 9th Circuit [45]
Robert V. Franklin 1947 Retired Judge, Ohio District Court of Appeals.  
Odell Horton 1951 Justice, U.S. District Court W. Tenn. [46]
Reginald C. Lindsay 1967 Justice, United States Court of Appeals 7th Circuit [47]
James L. Hudson 1961 Director of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development; Chair, National Capitol Revitalization Corporation Board [24]
Michael D. Johnson 1990 Judge, Superior Court, Fulton Co., Georgia [48]
Jeh Johnson 1979 Secretary of Homeland Security, first black Partner, Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP, named to the National Law Journal's 50 Most Influential Minority Lawyers; appointed General Counsel for the Defense Department by President Barack Obama; former General Counsel U.S. Air Force.  
C. Vernon Mason 1967 disbarred lawyer, Tawana Brawley case, Howard Beach incident.  
Stephen L. Maxwell 1942 first Black District Court Judge in Minnesota [49]
Tyrone C. Means 1973 Founding Partner, Thomas Means Gillis & Seay; Counsel and Board Member, Martin Luther King Jr. National Memorial Project Foundation [50][51]
Graham T. Perry c.1920 First African American Assistant Attorney-General for State of Illinois [52]
Olu Stevens 1992 Circuit Court Judge for the 30th Circuit KY [53]
Thomas Sampson Sr. 1968 founding Partner of Thompson Kennedy Sampson & Patterson, the oldest minority-owned law firm in the state of Georgia. [54][55]
Jerome Walker 1981 Partner Troutman Sanders, LLP; former General Counsel for the Hong Kong & Shanghai Banking Corp. Ltd. [56]
Horace T. Ward 1949 Federal Judge, U.S. District Court Northern, Georgia; Inducted into the National Bar Association Hall of Fame and recipient of the Trumpet Award for Civil Rights Advocacy [57]
Brent Wilson 1973 Partner, Elarbee Thompson Sapp & Wilson; Who's Who in American Law; Listed among America's Top Black Lawyers by Black Enterprise ; Chamber's USA Best Lawyers for Business. [58]
Richard T. White 1967 Sr. VP and General Counsel for the Auto Club Group and Chairman of the Association of Corporate Counsel [59]
  

Journalist and media personalities[edit]Name Class year Notability References
Geoff Bennett 2002 Washington reporter, Time Warner Cable News / NY1 [60]
Michael DeMond Davis 1961 Pulitzer Prize nominated journalist; author of Black American Women in Olympic Track & Field and co-author of Thurgood Marshall: Warrior at the Bar, Rebel on the Bench.  
Robert E. Johnson 1948 former Executive Editor and Associate Publisher, Jet Magazine  
Kevin A. Ross 1985 Host/producer of daytime syndication legal show America's Court with Judge Ross  
Jamal Simmons 1993 Political correspondent for CNN  
Vincent Tubbs c.1938 Co-founder of National Negro Newspaper Week and first African American to head a motion picture industry union [61][62]
  




Literature[edit]Name Class year Notability Reference(s)
Lerone Bennett, Jr. 1949 Senior editor for the Johnson Publishing Group (JET, Ebony); author Before the Mayflower  
Sanford Biggers 1993 Artist, Professor Columbia University School of the Arts  
Thomas Dent 1952 writer and poet; author Magnolia Street [63]
Jefferson Grisby 1938 author, artist; NAACP Man of the Year Award; first African American to publish a book for collegiate art teachers [41]
Miles Marshall Lewis 1993 Pop culture critic, essayist, and author  




Military service[edit]
Otha ThorntonName Class year Notability References
Otha Thornton, Lt. Colonel 1989 former Director of Human Resources and Presidential Communications Officer for the White House Communications Agency; Awarded an Honorary Doctorate degree by Michigan Technological University; former Assistant Professor, Michigan Technological University and Winner of the Parting of the Waters Award for Faculty Excellence.  
James R. Hall, Lt. General (ret.) 1957 Deputy Inspector General, the United States Army  
  




Religion[edit]Name Class year Notability Reference(s)
Keith L. Somerville 1992 Pastor, Calvary-Houston United Methodist Church  
M. William Howard, Jr. (minister) 1968 Pastor Bethany Baptist Church, former President New York Theological Seminary; Chair, Rutgers University Board of Governors [64]
Thomas Kilgore, Jr. 1931 Civil Rights pioneer and Pastor Emeritus, Second Baptist Church; a building is named in his honor on the Morehouse campus [64]
Otis Moss, Jr. 1956 Pastor and Theologian  
Otis Moss III 1992 Pastor, Trinity United Church of Christ; listed on the Root 100 [65]
Kelly Miller Smith 1942 assistant dean Vanderbilt University Divinity School (circa 1970s-1980s)  
Howard Thurman 1923 Renowned Theologian; Dean of Chapel Boston University  
Frederick B. Williams  Canon of the Church of the Intercession in Harlem, New York (1971-2005)  

Science and medicine[edit]
Mustafa Davis
Roger L. WoodName Class year Notability References
Henry W. Foster, Jr. 1954 President Emeritus, Meharry Medical College; Clinical Professor, Vanderbilt University; former nominee to post of U.S. Surgeon General; Presidential Advisor  
John Hopps, Jr. 1958 Physicist, former longtime Director of the Charles Stark Draper Laboratory and distinguished professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT); Recipient of the National Materials Advancement Award; former Deputy Under Secretary for the United States Department of Defense.  
Roger Wood II 1966 Computer Scientist; first African-American software developer at Bell Labs [66]
Calvin B. Johnson 1989 24th Secretary of Health for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania of the Pennsylvania Department of Health  
Paul Q. Judge 1998 Award winning computer technologist, inventor and entrepreneur;recipient of MIT Technology Review Magazine's "100 Top Innovators under 35" and voted Black Engineer of the Year (2006).  
Samuel M. Nabrit 1925 Distinguished Science Professor; first African-American appointed to the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission; served on Dwight Eisenhower's National Science Board; first African-American to receive a doctoral degree from Brown University; and first African-American to serve as Trustee at Brown University; President of Texas Southern University. [67]
Donald Hopkins 1962 Director and Vice President, Health Programs, The Carter Center; a 1995 MacArthur Fellow; Nominated for the Pulitzer Prize in 1983.  
Roderic Pettigrew 1972 Cardiologist and renowned Biomedical Engineer; Director, National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering; former Director of Magnetic Resonance Research and Professor of Radiology and Cardiology at Emory University School of Medicine; Listed annually among the "Best Doctors in America." [68]
Mack Roach III 1975 Chair, Radiation Oncology, University of California, San Francisco; named four times among the "Best Doctors in America"; American Cancer Society Fellow ; American College of Radiology Fellow  
Asa G. Yancey Sr. 1937 First African-American professor and Professor Emeritus at Emory University School of Medicine, first African-American doctor and Medical Director at Grady Memorial Hospital.  
Mustafa Davis 1997 Alum, Meharry Medical College; Associate Professor, Meharry Medical College [69]
  

Service and social reform[edit]
Civil Rights Leader Martin Luther King, Jr.Name Class year Notability Reference(s)
Hamilton Holmes 1963 Desegregated the University of Georgia (along with Charlayne Hunter). He first attended Morehouse before transferring to UGA [16]
Martin Luther King Jr. 1948 Leader of the Civil Rights movement and Nobel Peace Prize Laureate; delivered the historic I Have a Dream speech during the March on Washington 1963 [16]
Howard Zehr 1965 Grandfather of Restorative Justice; 2006 winner of the Community of Christ Peace Award; first White student to attend Morehouse  




Sports[edit]Olympics[edit]
Edwin Moses at the 1987 World ChampionshipName Class year Notability Reference(s)
Edwin Moses 1978 Olympic gold medalist [16]

Baseball[edit]Name Class year Notability Reference(s)
Donn Clendenon 1956 New York Mets Outfielder and 1969 World Series MVP  




Football (American)[edit]


Name Class year Notability Reference(s)
Jerome Boger  Current referee and umpire in the NFL (National Football League); former quarterback for the Morehouse Tigers football team  
Caesar "Zip" Gayles 1924 former head football coach and former head basketball coach at Langston University, Member of SWAC Hall of Fame and NAIA Basketball Hall of Fame [70]
David Graham 1982 DE, Seattle Seahawks 1982-1987 [71]
Ramon Harewood 2010 OL, Baltimore Ravens 2010 [71]
Issac Keys  LB, Arizona Cardinals 2004-2005 [71]
John David Washington 2006 RB, St. Louis Rams 2006, All-time leading rusher at Morehouse; RB in the UFL; son of Oscar Award winning actor Denzel Washington.  

Others[edit]Name Class year Notability References
John Sharpe James 1992 US Army Major, decorated veteran, member of Municipal Council of Newark [72]
Dexter King  son of Martin Luther King Jr.  
Ennis Cosby 1992 son of comedian Bill Cosby  
  

Notable faculty[edit]Name Department Notability Reference
Na'im Akbar  Author, Breaking the Chains and Images of Psychological Slavery  
Amalia Amaki  Modern and Contemporary Art  
Clayborne Carson  Executive Director, Martin Luther King Jr. Collection; Professor, Stanford University  
Lawrence Edward Carter  Dean, Martin Luther King Chapel; Fulbright Scholar; founder, the Gandhi-King-Ikeda Community Builders Prize  
Claude B. Dansby  Legendary chair, Mathematics Dept.  
Louis Delsarte  painter, muralist  
E. Franklin Frazier  Author, Black Bourgeoisie  
Kemper Harreld  Established the Morehouse College Glee Club  
J.K. Haynes  Chair, Biology Department; New York Academy of Science; Who's Who in Science and Engineering; Who's Who Among America's Teachers; Visiting Scholar Brown University  
John Hope (educator)  first black President of Morehouse  
John Hopps, Jr.  former Director, Charles Stark Draper Laboratory, MIT  
Edward A. Jones  Author, A Candle In The Dark: A History of Morehouse College  
Benjamin E. Mays  Mentor to Martin Luther King, Jr.; established the institutions international academic reputation and gave rise to the Morehouse Mystique  
Frederick E. Mapp  F.E. Mapp Science & Math Symposium  
Henry Cecil McBay  Winner of the Norton Prize in Chemistry, the Norris Award, and the Herty Award for Outstanding Contributions in Chemistry; 1st MLK Visiting Scholar at MIT  
Harriet J. Walton  "Mother Walton" was a UNCF Dana Fellow; Who's Who Men and Women of Science (1974); Who's Who of American Women (1974); Outstanding Educators of America (1971)  
Charles Wilbert Snow  Diplomat

Good deal...I like to see successful Blacks.

Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: LittleJ on December 18, 2014, 11:09:07 AM
Blah blah blah.  You keep saying I hate blacks but never prove it.  All I'm doing in bringing a little reality into your life.  You've called me racial slurs on multiple occasions.  I've never once used a racial slur.  Evidence seems to indicate you're the racist one.

Find where I've called you racial slurs. You're "bringing a little reality into my life" gets annoying after every thread you complain about Hebrews. At least 33386 is honest about his views. Just come out the closet already.

Btw Roll tide :)
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: LittleJ on December 18, 2014, 11:10:09 AM
University of Attica State Prison - we know 

 ;D
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 18, 2014, 11:21:19 AM
Find where I've called you racial slurs. You're "bringing a little reality into my life" gets annoying after every thread you complain about Hebrews. At least 33386 is honest about his views. Just come out the closet already.

Btw Roll tide :)


You know you have.  I'm not going to go through all your old posts to prove something we both know is true.  I'm not complaining, I'm just not spoon feeding you the party line.  I understand that you're unused to people not humoring your racial paranoia and persecution complex.   I believe strongly in the concept of the gadfly nipping at societies hypocrisy.  I call bullshit when I see it.

Again, prove I'm racist.  You just don't like being called out.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Option D on December 18, 2014, 11:21:24 AM
You left out their Valedictorian was white.
 ;D ;D ;D ;D

http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/05/16/white.valedictorian/ (http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/05/16/white.valedictorian/)

I swear, it's like taking candy from a baby... ;)


yeah..Packwood...back in 2008.....what the baby and candy have do to with anything
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Option D on December 18, 2014, 11:24:23 AM
I could tell immediately.  This would also explain why you're going to medical school in a foreign country.   You can list as many people as you like but the fact is Hebrew U's are academically inferior and corrupt.

Ok...so .... i didnt go to Med School in another country. I went to Emory.
Also...Puerto rico is where i did some work, and my grandmother is there which i why i took that match

And Puerto rico isnt a foreign country broski. Its part of the US. So...like..um... yeah
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 18, 2014, 11:28:37 AM
Ok...so .... i didnt go to Med School in another country. I went to Emory.
Also...Puerto rico is where i did some work, and my grandmother is there which i why i took that match

And Puerto rico isnt a foreign country broski. Its part of the US. So...like..um... yeah


Puerto Rico is a territory of the United States but it isn't part of the United States.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Option D on December 18, 2014, 11:31:36 AM


Puerto Rico is a territory of the United States but it isn't part of the United States.


ok bro you got it
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Option D on December 18, 2014, 11:33:21 AM
.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: CalvinH on December 18, 2014, 11:35:16 AM
Option D is one of the coolest mofos on this board.




....that is all, please continue.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Option D on December 18, 2014, 11:36:05 AM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/65th_Infantry_Regiment_(United_States)

Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: LittleJ on December 18, 2014, 11:36:16 AM


Puerto Rico is a territory of the United States but it isn't part of the United States.

You attack Hebrews that go to college?  Damn, what does a Hebrews have to do to please you?
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 18, 2014, 11:37:51 AM

ok bro you got it

Each of the three multiple choice sections is worth 15 points for a total of 45 points, but it's nearly impossible to achieve a perfect score. The average MCAT score each year is somewhere around a 24 (8 in each section).

A good (competitive at most MD schools) score is around 30 and a stellar score is somewhere above a 34 to 36 (competitive at the top medical schools in the country). A score of 36 or better would put you in the top 2% of the country. The writing sample is scored with a letter system from J (lowest) to T (highest), but is much less important than the number score. You never hear anyone mention the letter score. All you ever hear people talk about is the number, although some people insist that they are also considered in the admissions process somehow.

Just to give you an extreme example that the MCAT is not the only measurement which is important: 60 applicants were admitted to allopathic medical schools in 2005 who had an MCAT score which was less than 17. Keep in mind that there are a few allopathic medical schools in Puerto Rico, for example, which have very low MCAT averages (20.1, 21.3 and 23). These schools could be responsible for many of these numbers.

Again, this sort of low score is a rare exception. For all intents and purposes an MCAT score below 25 will make it almost impossible for you to gain admission to allopathic (MD) medical schools. You will still be competitive for osteopathic medical schools, podiatry schools and Caribbean medical schools.
http://www.startmedicine.com/app/gpamcat.asp


You attack Hebrews that go to college?  Damn, what does a Hebrews have to do to please you?

Really?  I thought I was attacking shitty schools. 
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: LittleJ on December 18, 2014, 11:38:49 AM
Option D is one of the coolest mofos on this board.




....that is all, please continue.

Archer doesn't like Hebrew lovers. He's going to destroy you.

Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 18, 2014, 11:40:16 AM
Archer doesn't like Hebrew lovers. He's going to destroy you.


Oh god, you're going to whine again.  Woe is me.  

The current political status of Puerto Rico is the result of various political activities within both the United States and Puerto Rican governments. Politically, Puerto Rico is an unincorporated territory of the United States which according to the U.S. Supreme Court's Insular Cases is "a territory appurtenant and belonging to the United States, but not a part of the United States."[1][2] The basic question regarding this issue is whether Puerto Rico should remain a U.S. territory, become a U.S. state or become an independent country.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Political_status_of_Puerto_Rico
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Option D on December 18, 2014, 11:40:27 AM
Each of the three multiple choice sections is worth 15 points for a total of 45 points, but it's nearly impossible to achieve a perfect score. The average MCAT score each year is somewhere around a 24 (8 in each section).

A good (competitive at most MD schools) score is around 30 and a stellar score is somewhere above a 34 to 36 (competitive at the top medical schools in the country). A score of 36 or better would put you in the top 2% of the country. The writing sample is scored with a letter system from J (lowest) to T (highest), but is much less important than the number score. You never hear anyone mention the letter score. All you ever hear people talk about is the number, although some people insist that they are also considered in the admissions process somehow.

Just to give you an extreme example that the MCAT is not the only measurement which is important: 60 applicants were admitted to allopathic medical schools in 2005 who had an MCAT score which was less than 17. Keep in mind that there are a few allopathic medical schools in Puerto Rico, for example, which have very low MCAT averages (20.1, 21.3 and 23). These schools could be responsible for many of these numbers.



Again, this sort of low score is a rare exception. For all intents and purposes an MCAT score below 25 will make it almost impossible for you to gain admission to allopathic (MD) medical schools. You will still be competitive for osteopathic medical schools, podiatry schools and Caribbean medical schools.
http://www.startmedicine.com/app/gpamcat.asp


Really?  I thought I was attacking shitty schools.  
i didnt go to school in Puerto Rico.. I worked there. I went to school in Atlanta
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 18, 2014, 11:43:02 AM
i didnt go to school in Puerto Rico.. I worked there. I went to schoon in Atlanta


Uh huh.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Option D on December 18, 2014, 11:43:55 AM

Uh huh.

there you go
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 18, 2014, 11:46:32 AM
there you go

What was your MCAT score and be honest?  I doubt you will
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: LittleJ on December 18, 2014, 11:47:16 AM
Each of the three multiple choice sections is worth 15 points for a total of 45 points, but it's nearly impossible to achieve a perfect score. The average MCAT score each year is somewhere around a 24 (8 in each section).

A good (competitive at most MD schools) score is around 30 and a stellar score is somewhere above a 34 to 36 (competitive at the top medical schools in the country). A score of 36 or better would put you in the top 2% of the country. The writing sample is scored with a letter system from J (lowest) to T (highest), but is much less important than the number score. You never hear anyone mention the letter score. All you ever hear people talk about is the number, although some people insist that they are also considered in the admissions process somehow.

Just to give you an extreme example that the MCAT is not the only measurement which is important: 60 applicants were admitted to allopathic medical schools in 2005 who had an MCAT score which was less than 17. Keep in mind that there are a few allopathic medical schools in Puerto Rico, for example, which have very low MCAT averages (20.1, 21.3 and 23). These schools could be responsible for many of these numbers.

Again, this sort of low score is a rare exception. For all intents and purposes an MCAT score below 25 will make it almost impossible for you to gain admission to allopathic (MD) medical schools. You will still be competitive for osteopathic medical schools, podiatry schools and Caribbean medical schools.
http://www.startmedicine.com/app/gpamcat.asp


Really?  I thought I was attacking shitty schools. 

Yes UA is a "shitty" school. Oh brother  ::)
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Devon97 on December 18, 2014, 11:48:21 AM
yeah..Packwood...back in 2008.....what the baby and candy have do to with anything

Some white cat strolls into the most prestigious "black institution" and easily walks out as the Valedictorian.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 18, 2014, 11:49:54 AM
Yes UA is a "shitty" school. Oh brother  ::)

I was specifically talking about Hebrew Us.   You said yourself UA was filled with horrible racists so it can't be all that good.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Option D on December 18, 2014, 11:50:57 AM
Some white cat strolls into the most prestigious "black institution" and easily walks out as the Valedictorian.


thats cool...still not seeing the issue here.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Europe on December 18, 2014, 11:51:25 AM
does this mirror how Africa works??  :D :D
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Option D on December 18, 2014, 11:52:20 AM
What was your MCAT score and be honest?  I doubt you will
so whats the point then bro
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 18, 2014, 11:55:10 AM
so whats the point then bro
 

Hebrew Us have low academic standards.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 18, 2014, 11:56:21 AM
Some white cat strolls into the most prestigious "black institution" and easily walks out as the Valedictorian.


Let's hope Asian students never consider attending.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Devon97 on December 18, 2014, 11:56:25 AM
thats cool...still not seeing the issue here.

Did you give him daps and a pound hug when he exited the stage?
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Coach is Back! on December 18, 2014, 11:56:38 AM
I always try to help blacks then bring them down but my effort never seems to matter

Funny, that's what people like Sharpton, Faarakan and Jackson do.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Devon97 on December 18, 2014, 11:57:13 AM
Let's hope Asian students never consider attending.

LOL

or Indian...
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Coach is Back! on December 18, 2014, 11:57:54 AM
I went to a black college

Morehouse College

Hermain Cain went there too, as well as Martin Luther the King, Edwin Moses, Samuel L Jackson, Spike Lee

well heres the wiki

Morehouse alumni include notable African-Americans such as: Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., theologian Howard Thurman, businessman and former Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain, filmmaker Spike Lee, filmmaker Robert G. Christie (a.k.a. Bobby Garcia), actor Samuel L. Jackson, polymath and creative genius Stephan B. Hall, Gang Starr rapper Guru, Olympic gold medalist Edwin Moses, Lloyd McNeill, Jazz flutist, USPS Kwanza Stamp designer, the first recipient of Howard University's MFA Degree, former Bank of America Chairman Walter E. Massey, the first African-American mayor of Atlanta Maynard Jackson, Major League Baseball first baseman and 1969 World Series MVP Donn Clendenon, former Secretary of Health and Human Services Louis W. Sullivan, and former United States Surgeon General David Satcher.

According to Morehouse's own "About Us" page, Morehouse was the first historically black college to produce a Rhodes Scholar. The school's first Rhodes Scholar, Nima Warfield, was named in 1994, the second, Christopher Elders, in 2001.[49] A third, Oluwabusayo "Topé" Folarin, was named in 2004. Morehouse has been home to seven Fulbright Scholars, Damon M. Lombard (1995), John Thomas (2004), Jason T. Garrett (2006), Morgan C. Williams, Jr. (2006), Lasean Brown (2008), Eric R. Baylor (2008) and Wendell H. Marsh (2009).[50][51]

Since 1999, Morehouse has produced five Marshall Scholars, five Luce Scholars, four Watson Fellows and 2010 White House Fellow, Erich Caulfield.[52][53] Previous Watson Fellows include, Craig Marberry '81, Kenneth Flowers '83 and Lynn P. Harrison III '79.



Spike Lee is about as racist as they come. Right up there with Sharpton.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: dr.chimps on December 18, 2014, 11:58:20 AM
Getbig race threads are predictable. The same idjits are 5-6-7-8 posts a page.  
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: BB on December 18, 2014, 11:59:16 AM
Was just stuck by the thought that Anabolichalo would be in Heaven at an HBC, with his love of the chocolate ladies and all. Heck we could maybe even get a nice rom-com out of it sorta like Soul Man 2 -

(http://content.internetvideoarchive.com/content/photos/004/000169_27.jpg).
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Devon97 on December 18, 2014, 11:59:21 AM
Getbig race threads are predictable. The same idjits are 5-6-7-8 posts a page.  

You're the poster boy for a white-guilt liberal.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 18, 2014, 12:00:23 PM
Getbig race threads are predictable. The same idjits are 5-6-7-8 posts a page.  

Your posts are predictable.  Your opinions are predictable.  Now run along, there is shuffle board game at your group home, old man.

You're the poster boy for a white-guilt liberal.

He's a walking cliche.  He doesn't have an original or independent thought in his Alzheimer addled brain.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Option D on December 18, 2014, 12:12:01 PM
 

Hebrew Us have low academic standards.

Lol ok well that's cool
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 18, 2014, 12:13:29 PM
Lol ok well that's cool

And it also has the advantage of being true.  Community Colleges are better.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Option D on December 18, 2014, 12:40:16 PM
And it also has the advantage of being true.  Community Colleges are better.

i think youre right...

Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Option D on December 18, 2014, 12:41:03 PM
Spike Lee is about as racist as they come. Right up there with Sharpton.

what about Herman Cain...him too?
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: The Abdominal Snoman on December 18, 2014, 01:05:31 PM
Guessing the real number is probably closer to 5%
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Hulkotron on December 18, 2014, 01:10:51 PM
Only someone with a really low score.  Blacks are already accepted into U.S. medical schools with lower scores.


The left-most column there is shocking. 
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Coach is Back! on December 18, 2014, 01:16:33 PM
what about Herman Cain...him too?

I can't recall him making racist anti-white remarks.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 18, 2014, 01:19:17 PM
Where did Michael Brown and Asktray go to school? 
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 18, 2014, 01:19:57 PM
The left-most column there is shocking. 

The lesson is if you have options on who is your doctor don't choose option D.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: The True Adonis on December 18, 2014, 01:33:47 PM
I went to a black college

Morehouse College

Hermain Cain went there too, as well as Martin Luther the King, Edwin Moses, Samuel L Jackson, Spike Lee

well heres the wiki

Morehouse alumni include notable African-Americans such as: Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., theologian Howard Thurman, businessman and former Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain, filmmaker Spike Lee, filmmaker Robert G. Christie (a.k.a. Bobby Garcia), actor Samuel L. Jackson, polymath and creative genius Stephan B. Hall, Gang Starr rapper Guru, Olympic gold medalist Edwin Moses, Lloyd McNeill, Jazz flutist, USPS Kwanza Stamp designer, the first recipient of Howard University's MFA Degree, former Bank of America Chairman Walter E. Massey, the first African-American mayor of Atlanta Maynard Jackson, Major League Baseball first baseman and 1969 World Series MVP Donn Clendenon, former Secretary of Health and Human Services Louis W. Sullivan, and former United States Surgeon General David Satcher.

According to Morehouse's own "About Us" page, Morehouse was the first historically black college to produce a Rhodes Scholar. The school's first Rhodes Scholar, Nima Warfield, was named in 1994, the second, Christopher Elders, in 2001.[49] A third, Oluwabusayo "Topé" Folarin, was named in 2004. Morehouse has been home to seven Fulbright Scholars, Damon M. Lombard (1995), John Thomas (2004), Jason T. Garrett (2006), Morgan C. Williams, Jr. (2006), Lasean Brown (2008), Eric R. Baylor (2008) and Wendell H. Marsh (2009).[50][51]

Since 1999, Morehouse has produced five Marshall Scholars, five Luce Scholars, four Watson Fellows and 2010 White House Fellow, Erich Caulfield.[52][53] Previous Watson Fellows include, Craig Marberry '81, Kenneth Flowers '83 and Lynn P. Harrison III '79.


Who cares. 
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: The True Adonis on December 18, 2014, 01:43:47 PM
what about Herman Cain...him too?
Hermain Cain was a piece of shit.  Cain is a baptist creationist.  Guess they don`t teach science at Hebrew U.  :-\




Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 18, 2014, 01:47:23 PM
Hermain Cain was a piece of shit.  Cain is a baptist creationist.  Guess they don`t teach science at Hebrew U.  :-\







Hebrews the ganja in the crib - dat all dat matters bro. 
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: The True Adonis on December 18, 2014, 01:53:44 PM

Hebrews the ganja in the crib - dat all dat matters bro.  
You were all about Herman Cain and wanted to vote for him though.   ;)
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Option D on December 18, 2014, 02:33:19 PM
Hermain Cain was a piece of shit.  Cain is a baptist creationist.  Guess they don`t teach science at Hebrew U.  :-\





yeah Cain was freaking awful

I guess theres no science at Yale either..Isnt GWB a creationist as well...


yeah... i think so.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: tommywishbone on December 18, 2014, 02:34:13 PM
They were recruiting Trayvon Martin and Mike Brown. So they've taken a step back.

 :D. I've always said, recruiting is the key. Oh well, perhaps they can get Tamir Rice to transfer...  Opps, never mind.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Rambone on December 18, 2014, 02:52:56 PM
Should be successful, but Math results won't be as good as no one will be copying from the chink in the class room.

Incident rates will be very low compared to a black college, bar the one off Roger Elliot style slayings once in a very while:

"You girls have never been attracted to me. I don't know why you girls aren't attracted to me, but I will punish you all for it. It's an injustice, a crime, because... I don't know what you don't see in me. I'm the perfect guy and yet you throw yourselves at these obnoxious men instead of me, the supreme gentleman"

(http://ipress.ua/media/gallery/full/e/l/elliot_rodger.jpg)

"On the day of retribution, I am going to enter the hottest sorority house at UCSB and I will slaughter every single spoiled, stuck-up, blond slut I see inside there. All those girls I've desired so much. They have all rejected me and looked down on me as an inferior man if I ever made a sexual advance toward them, while they throw themselves at these obnoxious brutes."
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Devon97 on December 18, 2014, 03:08:10 PM
yeah Cain was freaking awful

I guess theres no science at Yale either..Isnt GWB a creationist as well...


yeah... i think so.

Or Harvard. obama is too.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: LittleJ on December 18, 2014, 03:09:37 PM
You were all about Herman Cain and wanted to vote for him though.   ;)

Sure was ;D
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Lustral on December 18, 2014, 03:16:21 PM
I went to a black college

Morehouse College

Hermain Cain went there too, as well as Martin Luther the King, Edwin Moses, Samuel L Jackson, Spike Lee

well heres the wiki

Morehouse alumni include notable African-Americans such as: Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., theologian Howard Thurman, businessman and former Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain, filmmaker Spike Lee, filmmaker Robert G. Christie (a.k.a. Bobby Garcia), actor Samuel L. Jackson, polymath and creative genius Stephan B. Hall, Gang Starr rapper Guru, Olympic gold medalist Edwin Moses, Lloyd McNeill, Jazz flutist, USPS Kwanza Stamp designer, the first recipient of Howard University's MFA Degree, former Bank of America Chairman Walter E. Massey, the first African-American mayor of Atlanta Maynard Jackson, Major League Baseball first baseman and 1969 World Series MVP Donn Clendenon, former Secretary of Health and Human Services Louis W. Sullivan, and former United States Surgeon General David Satcher.

According to Morehouse's own "About Us" page, Morehouse was the first historically black college to produce a Rhodes Scholar. The school's first Rhodes Scholar, Nima Warfield, was named in 1994, the second, Christopher Elders, in 2001.[49] A third, Oluwabusayo "Topé" Folarin, was named in 2004. Morehouse has been home to seven Fulbright Scholars, Damon M. Lombard (1995), John Thomas (2004), Jason T. Garrett (2006), Morgan C. Williams, Jr. (2006), Lasean Brown (2008), Eric R. Baylor (2008) and Wendell H. Marsh (2009).[50][51]

Since 1999, Morehouse has produced five Marshall Scholars, five Luce Scholars, four Watson Fellows and 2010 White House Fellow, Erich Caulfield.[52][53] Previous Watson Fellows include, Craig Marberry '81, Kenneth Flowers '83 and Lynn P. Harrison III '79.




Wow the rapper Guru and a jazz flutist went there? My Uni only has several Nobel Prize winners, innumerable business leaders and presidents, Miss World when I was there (not an achievement but there was good ass there) and legends like me. Lol, a jazz flutist.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Bevo on December 18, 2014, 03:46:42 PM
University of alabama filled with backwoods peckerwood hill Billy's. Why would any Hebrew want to attend such a school? :D
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: The True Adonis on December 18, 2014, 04:07:11 PM

Wow the rapper Guru and a jazz flutist went there? My Uni only has several Nobel Prize winners, innumerable business leaders and presidents, Miss World when I was there (not an achievement but there was good ass there) and legends like me. Lol, a jazz flutist.
Don`t forget the Kwanza Stamp designer.  Thats important.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Option D on December 18, 2014, 04:30:54 PM

Wow the rapper Guru and a jazz flutist went there? My Uni only has several Nobel Prize winners, innumerable business leaders and presidents, Miss World when I was there (not an achievement but there was good ass there) and legends like me. Lol, a jazz flutist.

thats awesome.. your school is awesome no doubt

but more than a Guru (i really liked that dude.. solid rapper) and a flutist went there....heres a list of some other ones that went there.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Morehouse_College_alumni
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Bevo on December 18, 2014, 04:32:40 PM
Don`t forget the Kwanza Stamp designer.  Thats important.

Where did u attend college TA?
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Lustral on December 18, 2014, 04:41:54 PM
thats awesome.. your school is awesome no doubt

but more than a Guru (i really liked that dude.. solid rapper) and a flutist went there....heres a list of some other ones that went there.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Morehouse_College_alumni

you think i will read a list of nobodies when their luminaries are limited to two people?  Secondly how does it matter that the former chairman of bp donald sutherland did law like i did in same uni? I am not him and doubt i will ever accomplish what he has financially so why rate myself against him? Harvard dropouts read better than graduates accomplishment wise if money matters. What sticks out is that the uni is so shit 10pc of students dont finish a degree. It is a failed venture.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 18, 2014, 04:47:41 PM
you think i will read a list of nobodies when their luminaries are limited to two people?  Secondly how does it matter that the former chairman of bp donald sutherland did law like i did in same uni? I am not him and doubt i will ever accomplish what he has financially so why rate myself against him? Harvard dropouts read better than graduates accomplishment wise if money matters. What sticks out is that the uni is so shit 10pc of students dont finish a degree. It is a failed venture.


Black student body, black administration and black professors and still epic fail. Not an ounce of white privilege for miles.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Option D on December 18, 2014, 05:00:36 PM
you think i will read a list of nobodies when their luminaries are limited to two people?  Secondly how does it matter that the former chairman of bp donald sutherland did law like i did in same uni? I am not him and doubt i will ever accomplish what he has financially so why rate myself against him? Harvard dropouts read better than graduates accomplishment wise if money matters. What sticks out is that the uni is so shit 10pc of students dont finish a degree. It is a failed venture.


well thats cool too bro..
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Option D on December 18, 2014, 05:05:24 PM

Black student body, black administration and black professors and still epic fail. Not an ounce of white privilege for miles.

there you go again bro... you dont do well with research do you


but its all good..youre putting a lot of energy into this i see.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: nighttrain on December 18, 2014, 05:06:51 PM
MD > DO > MD (carribean schools)

Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 18, 2014, 05:11:11 PM
there you go again bro... you dont do well with research do you


but its all good..youre putting a lot of energy into this i see.

What's wrong about it?  It's an environment designed for black success and yet the results are failure.  Across the board Hebrew Us are failure factories.  Even when they lower standards and cheat the results are the same.

Why do Hebrew U have such low GPA and MCAT averages? Meharry's avg. BCPM is 3.3 and overall GPA is 3.44; it's avg. MCAT is 7.7. And those stats are for accepted, not matriculated, students.

The same applies to law schools.

Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: TestDummy on December 18, 2014, 05:13:31 PM
How is their basketball team doing?

not sure but I bet the Church's Chicken down the street is killin it  :D
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Lustral on December 18, 2014, 05:14:10 PM
What's wrong about it?  It's an environment designed for black success and yet the results are failure.  Across the board Hebrew Us are failure factories.  Even when they lower standards and cheat the results are the same.




Is that not the problem itself? Fashioning an educational institution  on race?
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 18, 2014, 05:16:06 PM
Is that not the problem itself? Fashioning an educational institution  on race?

I agree and in the end that's the point I'm making.  From a practical stand point there appears to be no advantage thus no reason for them to continue. 
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: nighttrain on December 18, 2014, 05:17:14 PM
lol if Option D couldn't get into Meharry's Medical School, then he must have had super low admission stats.\


Meharry is like 95% black students with terrible admission criteria.   http://www.mmc.edu/education/som/
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 18, 2014, 05:19:08 PM
lol if Option D couldn't get into Meharry's Medical School, then he must have had super low admission stats.\


Meharry is like 95% black students with terrible admission criteria.   http://www.mmc.edu/education/som/

Hebrew law schools are just as bad.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 18, 2014, 05:23:38 PM
Hebrew law schools are just as bad.

Option D is a Jamaican witch doctor.   
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 18, 2014, 05:26:26 PM
Option D is a Jamaican witch doctor.   
 

Making a house call.

Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Option D on December 18, 2014, 05:28:33 PM
Option D is a Jamaican witch doctor.   

LOL....Im not Jamaican. Im American
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Option D on December 18, 2014, 05:30:15 PM
 

Making a house call.



everything is right exept...he doesnt look like he even lifts. I got better quads then this guy, but his abs are better than mine for sure
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 18, 2014, 05:32:33 PM
everything is right exept...he doesnt look like he even lifts. I got better quads then this guy, but his abs are better than mine for sure

Good call.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: dr.chimps on December 18, 2014, 05:40:57 PM
Page 5. Same morons.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 18, 2014, 05:47:05 PM
Page 5. Same morons.


Yep, now that you've posted.  Go somewhere and die you pathetic old fuck.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 18, 2014, 05:53:32 PM

Yep, now that you've posted.  Go somewhere and die you pathetic old fuck.

Shaman D
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 18, 2014, 07:00:12 PM
everything is right exept...he doesnt look like he even lifts. I got better quads then this guy, but his abs are better than mine for sure

And you got better sunglasses too
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: LittleJ on December 18, 2014, 08:41:10 PM
University of alabama filled with backwoods peckerwood hill Billy's. Why would any Hebrew want to attend such a school? :D

Most of my highschool buddies went there. It was either UA or Auburn. If you're an athlete (or pretend to be one) they might forget you're a hebrew.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: muscleman-2013 on December 18, 2014, 08:51:53 PM
cliff notes?
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Viking11 on December 18, 2014, 09:03:45 PM
http://www.howard.edu/

Howard undergraduates have a mean composite SAT score of 1,082.[27] The students come from the following regions: New England 2%, Mid-West 8%. South 22%, Mid-Atlantic 55%, and West 12%.[27] Howard University is almost exclusively (91.2%) African-American.[4]
For 2014 that isn't a great sat SCORE.  541  on a subtest- Trade school.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Skorp1o on December 19, 2014, 12:44:42 AM
"On the day of retribution, I am going to enter the hottest sorority house at UCSB and I will slaughter every single spoiled, stuck-up, blond slut I see inside there. All those girls I've desired so much. They have all rejected me and looked down on me as an inferior man if I ever made a sexual advance toward them, while they throw themselves at these obnoxious brutes."

Deep shit.

He was also out to get these "brutes", luckily for us all Getbiggers in the area were either in the gym benching 400lbs spotted by Amanda Latona or at work closing a multi-million dollar deal.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Al Doggity on December 19, 2014, 02:07:53 AM
For 2014 that isn't a great sat SCORE.  541  on a subtest- Trade school.

 A large part of HBCUs mission is to make college accessible to a group for which it has been historically out of reach, largely because of race, but also because of socio-economic factors. The SAT is considered important for many colleges, but even the  College Board (the organization that administers the SAT) acknowledges that test results are tied too closely to family income and has tried to distance itself from the (literally) billion dollar SAT-tutoring industry that has sprung up around it. Just this year, it completed a massively-publicized overhaul  after years of being criticized  by many of the institutions that rely on its results.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: _aj_ on December 19, 2014, 02:42:11 AM
Deep shit.

He was also out to get these "brutes", luckily for us all Getbiggers in the area were either in the gym benching 400lbs spotted by Amanda Latona or at work closing a multi-million dollar deal.

We are all bulletproof anyway...
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: oldgolds on December 19, 2014, 05:48:27 AM
A large part of HBCUs mission is to make college accessible to a group for which it has been historically out of reach, largely because of race, but also because of socio-economic factors. The SAT is considered important for many colleges, but even the  College Board (the organization that administers the SAT) acknowledges that test results are tied too closely to family income and has tried to distance itself from the (literally) billion dollar SAT-tutoring industry that has sprung up around it. Just this year, it completed a massively-publicized overhaul  after years of being criticized  by many of the institutions that rely on its results.

Yes, SAT scores are tied to family income because smart people generally make more money...If you say tests are biased, how can a math test be biased?
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: _aj_ on December 19, 2014, 06:44:33 AM
(http://i.imgur.com/GVZ1kuX.jpg)

LMAO!
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Al Doggity on December 19, 2014, 08:16:02 AM
Yes, SAT scores are tied to family income because smart people generally make more money...If you say tests are biased, how can a math test be biased?


No, SAT scores are tied to family income because rich families spend literally thousands of dollars on tutoring programs that teach kids techniques specific to taking the SAT . They aren't even techniques that can typically be transferred to other high school or college exams, because the SAT is designed in such a specific way.  An SAT score is not an accurate predictor of career success or even academic success in college. It is an indication of how much time and money was spent preparing for the SAT.


And it's not strictly a black/white issue. It's not even limited to rich/poor. The difference is pronounced by socio-economic gradients: middle class/upper middle class/ wealthy.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: LittleJ on December 19, 2014, 08:21:33 AM
Yes the Zack Morris/Jessie Spano episode was a good example of SAT scores.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: dr.chimps on December 19, 2014, 08:23:21 AM
Harvard graded-on-the-curve A's?    ;D
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 19, 2014, 08:57:31 AM
Harvard graded-on-the-curve A's?    ;D

You've already posted this nonsense.  You're getbigs version of the movie Memento. Alzheimer is a hell of a disease.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 19, 2014, 08:59:37 AM

No, SAT scores are tied to family income because rich families spend literally thousands of dollars on tutoring programs that teach kids techniques specific to taking the SAT . They aren't even techniques that can typically be transferred to other high school or college exams, because the SAT is designed in such a specific way.  An SAT score is not an accurate predictor of career success or even academic success in college. It is an indication of how much time and money was spent preparing for the SAT.


And it's not strictly a black/white issue. It's not even limited to rich/poor. The difference is pronounced by socio-economic gradients: middle class/upper middle class/ wealthy.

Where you been kore?
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Al Doggity on December 19, 2014, 09:24:28 AM
Where you been kore?

Now that I'm here, guess you've only got about 3 or 4 posts left until you have to pretend you don't understand basic english and then scurry back to your rathole.

As is your MO, everything you've posted in this thread shows a fundamental misunderstanding of data.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 19, 2014, 09:34:05 AM
Now that I'm here, guess you've only got about 3 or 4 posts left until you have to pretend you don't understand basic english and then scurry back to your rathole.

As is your MO, everything you've posted in this thread shows a fundamental misunderstanding of data.

I've been wondering when you would show up, kore.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Al Doggity on December 19, 2014, 09:39:32 AM
I've been wondering when you would show up, kore.

I don't really read or post on the G&O too often, so when you don't contain your poor reading comprehension skills to the political board, I don't have as much of an opportunity to give you a proper smackdown.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 19, 2014, 09:41:17 AM
I don't really read or post on the G&O too often, so when you don't contain your poor reading comprehension skills to the political board, I don't have as much of an opportunity to give you a good smackdown.

Come on, Kore.  I thought we were buddies.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Al Doggity on December 19, 2014, 09:42:43 AM
Come on, Kore.  I thought we were buddies.
We're not... but even still, that wouldn't stop me from pointing out when you're wrong. Which is all of the time.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 19, 2014, 09:46:20 AM
We're not... but even still, that wouldn't stop me from pointing out when you're wrong. Which is all of the time.


You can believe that if that makes you feel better.  Why did you lie about not being kore? 
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Al Doggity on December 19, 2014, 09:52:30 AM

You can believe that if that makes you feel better.  Why did you lie about not being kore?  

I leave the lying up to you.

Where have I ever said anything about being Kore or not? If you want to believe who doesn't share your backwards views is the same person, I don't give a shit. You've also accused me of being 24kt and someone else.  ::)  The whole pile of nonsense is a red herring. I could have 50 different accounts, doesn't change the fact that everything you post is tripe and when you're questioned on it, you can never back it up well.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 19, 2014, 09:55:18 AM
I leave the lying up to you.

Where have I ever said anything about being Kore or not? If you want to believe who doesn't share your backwards views is the same person, I don't give a shit. You've also accused me of being 24kt and someone else.  ::)  The whole pile of nonsense is a red herring. I could have 50 different accounts, doesn't change the fact that everything you post is tripe.

You are kore and you lied about it. I did accuse you of being 24k because you both referenced black supremacist websites. How are my views backwards?  I want people to be responsible for themselves.  I want people to be honest. What's backwards about that?
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: James28 on December 19, 2014, 10:02:26 AM

You know you have.  I'm not going to go through all your old posts to prove something we both know is true.  I'm not complaining, I'm just not spoon feeding you the party line.  I understand that you're unused to people not humoring your racial paranoia and persecution complex.   I believe strongly in the concept of the gadfly nipping at societies hypocrisy.  I call bullshit when I see it.

Again, prove I'm racist.  You just don't like being called out.

Who gives a fuck if you're called 'racist'  :-X

I tar all blacks with the same brush. It's easier and quicker.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 19, 2014, 10:04:06 AM
Who gives a fuck if you're called 'racist'  :-X

I tar all blacks with the same brush. It's easier and quicker.

hahaha, it would be easier and quicker but I'm cynical enough to think black people are capable of learning something.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Al Doggity on December 19, 2014, 10:08:09 AM
You are kore and you lied about it. I did accuse you of being 24k because you both referenced black supremacist websites. How are my views backwards?  I want people to be responsible for themselves.  I want people to be honest. What's backwards about that?


I've never at all commented about being Kore or 24k. You can call me either one of those names, if you like, it means nothing to me and does not change the content of my posts.


You want people to be  honest?! You are the epitome of dishonesty and cherrypicking facts to support something you already believe, wrong or... always wrong. The "black supremacist website" that you claimed I referenced was the government sanctioned study that you said you got your stats from. I even posted screenshots. That still did not keep you from lying about it. In every single debate  I've ever had with you , you've done the same thing. Your views are backwards because you claim they are based in fact, but you can never defend them adequately. Because they are not based in fact. You have to lie to support them. You always lie.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Option D on December 19, 2014, 10:09:49 AM
hahaha, it would be easier and quicker but I'm cynical enough to think black people are capable of learning something.

this is what i dont understand tho. Like youve seen blacks excel in academia and law and science and medicine and literature, Like this isnt an off the wall thing. i dont understand that train of thought
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: James28 on December 19, 2014, 10:10:06 AM
hahaha, it would be easier and quicker but I'm cynical enough to think black people are capable of learning something.

They're not. Not on their own anyway. Stick them between proper races and a few might learn something whilst the rest would still be a few notches of IQ below a chimpanzee.

But since it's the Christmas holidays, I'll admit that the Blacks that made it out of the dumps, are some of the nicest people I've ever met. With whites I always feel that I have to watch myself a little bit more. Especially at work and in business.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 19, 2014, 10:14:06 AM

I've never at all commented about being Kore or 24k. You can call me either one of those names, if you like, it means nothing to me and does not change the content of my posts.


You want people to be  honest?! You are the epitome of dishonesty and cherrypicking facts to support something you already believe, wrong or... always wrong. The "black supremacist website" that you claimed I referenced was the government sanctioned study that you said you got your stats from. I even posted screenshots. That still did not keep you from lying about it. In every single debate  I've ever had with you , you've done the same thing. Your views are backwards because you claim they are based in fact, but you can never defend them adequately. Because they are not based in fact. You have to lie to support them. You always lie.

No it wasn't a government site. Your first rebuttal was cut and paste, word for word from a black supremacist site and then dropped it after I called you out on it.  You only knew about BOJ after I posted the link.  It was only after I posted the link that you even knew it existed.

You don't even cherrypick.  You offer no data at all.  You repeat talking points and offer no evidence to support your claims. I posted exactly from their website why the statistic were calculated the way they were and you just kept repeating the same thing over and over again. The statistics I posted are excepted by everyone and the conclusions I drew from them are not my own but theirs.  

this is what i dont understand tho. Like youve seen blacks excel in academia and law and science and medicine and literature, Like this isnt an off the wall thing. i dont understand that train of thought

It's more than that.  It's a mentality of victimization and blaming that needs to be addressed. Take Andre for example, he believes whites are to be held responsible for slavery in the past. He's not alone.  While he complains about blacks being judged he judges and feels righteous doing so.  As I said, he's not alone and that mentality needs to be challenged.

It's the right blacks feel to be racist.  It's rioting over a thug thief who attacked a cop.  It's the ability to see beyond a narrative you've been fed your entire life.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Al Doggity on December 19, 2014, 10:18:27 AM
No it wasn't a government site. Your first rebuttal was cut and paste, word for word from a black supremacist site and then dropped it after I called you out on it.  You only knew about BOJ after I posted the link.  It was only after I posted the link that you even knew it existed.

You don't even cherrypick.  You offer no data at all.  You repeat talking points and offer no evidence to support your claims. I posted exactly from their website why the statistic were calculated the way they were and you just kept repeating the same thing over and over again. The statistics I posted are excepted by everyone and the conclusions I drew from them are not my own but theirs.  

No, it was the government study. I posted direct links. You pretended not to understand them and I posted screenshots. You still pretended not to understand them. When I explained them to you line by line, you still pretended that you didn't understand them.  But here you go lying again. I would be more than happy to get into the discussion again.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Option D on December 19, 2014, 10:23:07 AM
It's more than that.  It's a mentality of victimization and blaming that needs to be addressed. Take Andre for example, he believes whites are to be held responsible for slavery in the past. He's not alone.  While he complains about blacks being judged he judges and feels righteous doing so.  As I said, he's not alone and that mentality needs to be challenged.

It's the right blacks feel to be racist.  It's rioting over a thug thief who attacked a cop.  It's the ability to see beyond a narrative you've been fed your entire life.
Has absolutley zero to do with you being "cynical" about blacks and learning...
What in fucks sake are you rambling on about.

stick to one train of thought chief and lets discuss that

And on another note. Not all blacks are the same. Not all think the same and not all have gone through the same life experiences that shape thought patterns. Once you stop with the idiotic lumping, the world will open up for you
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 19, 2014, 10:23:57 AM
No, it was the government study. I posted direct links. You pretended not to understand them and I posted screenshots. You still pretended not to understand them. When I explained them to you line by line, you still pretended that you didn't understand them.  But here you go lying again. I would be more than happy to get into the discussion again.

I sited the government study.  You initially responded with a word for word cut and paste from a black supremacist website.  I've posted the same study several times before we even started our discussion.

You didn't explain anything to me line by line.  You repeated the same thing, they only used a sample of ten.  I sent you a link to the PDF the BOJ released about their methodology. Did you read it? I explained why they calculated the way they did by quoting them directly.  If everyone accepts their findings and methodology I don't see a problem with what I posted.  It was their conclusions.    

Has absolutley zero to do with you being "cynical" about blacks and learning...
What in fucks sake are you rambling on about.

stick to one train of thought chief and lets discuss that

And on another note. Not all blacks are the same. Not all think the same and not all have gone through the same life experiences that shape thought patterns. Once you stop with the idiotic lumping, the world will open up for you

I think blacks can learn. That was my point.  Not all blacks are the same but the majority of blacks here, including you, repeat the same thing as Andre.   
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Rambone on December 19, 2014, 10:29:00 AM
Deep shit.

He was also out to get these "brutes", luckily for us all Getbiggers in the area were either in the gym benching 400lbs spotted by Amanda Latona or at work closing a multi-million dollar deal.

No doubt no doubt. I was busy adding to my watch collection and then later on baked a hummerbird cake.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Al Doggity on December 19, 2014, 10:36:10 AM
I sited the government study.  You initially responded with a word for word cut and paste from a black supremacist website.  I've posted the same study several times before we even started our discussion.

http://www.getbig.com/boards/index.php?topic=546754.msg7673773#msg7673773

This is my first post in that thread. You know I didn't just change it because you quote me in the very next post. As you can see, I posted the link to the actual study and directly to the relevant page. You didn't post a link to any study. You quoted from an inaccurate magazine article and you didn't even admit that until I pointed it out.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 19, 2014, 10:42:48 AM
http://www.getbig.com/boards/index.php?topic=546754.msg7673773#msg7673773

This is my first post in that thread. As you can see, I posted the link to the actual study and directly to the relevant page. You didn't post a link to any study. You quoted from an inaccurate magazine article and you didn't even admit that until I pointed it out.

It looks like you changed your original post to site the data methodology at the end of the page.

I might not have posted the link in this thread but I have in many others. It's possible that I assumed I did because I had before.  Still, why dispute data that is accepted by everyone.  What reason does the BOJ have to report false statistics and conclusions?    Don't you think they know what they are doing?
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Al Doggity on December 19, 2014, 10:46:49 AM
It looks like you changed your original post to site the data methodology at the end of the page.

I might not have posted the link in this thread but I have in many others. It's possible that I assumed I did because I had before.  Still, why dispute data that is accepted by everyone.  What reason does the BOJ have to report false statistics and conclusions?    Don't you think they know what they are doing?

You quote me in the very next post. I didn't change it.  What you posted was ripped off from a FRONTPAGE magazine article and you didn't even admit that until I brought it up. I"m not disputing what the BOJ report says. Your interpretation is wrong.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 19, 2014, 10:51:44 AM
You quote me in the very next post. I didn't change it.  What you posted was ripped off from a FRONTPAGE magazine article and you didn't even admit that until I brought it up. I"m not disputing what the BOJ report says. Your interpretation is wrong.

What does the BOJ data indicate to you?   You are claiming you aren't disputing the data so tell me how you interpret the data?
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Al Doggity on December 19, 2014, 10:56:48 AM
What does the BOJ data indicate to you?   You are claiming you aren't disputing the data so tell me how you interpret the data?

In several of the categories, there are less than 10 sample cases. You made the claim that you could make an accurate assessment on race based on these sample cases. Within the very study, it says that you cannot make an accurate assessment because the sample sizes are too small. You have stated over and over that the BOJ created some kin d of weight that corrects for this. That's simply not true. You are clinging to that point because you feel like it makes a point about race and crime, when no logical point can be inferred from such a small sample size. The authors of the study admit that.

Please peddle some more idiotic mumbo jumbo to stay the course.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 19, 2014, 11:11:01 AM
In several of the categories, there are less than 10 sample cases. You made the claim that you could make an accurate assessment on race based on these sample cases. Within the very study, it says that you cannot make an accurate assessment because the sample sizes are too small. You have stated over and over that the BOJ created some kin d of weight that corrects for this. That's simply not true. You are clinging to that point because you feel like it makes a point about race and crime, when no logical point can be inferred from such a small sample size. The authors of the study admit that.

Please peddle some more idiotic mumbo jumbo to stay the course.

So you are disputing the study?   You just said you weren't disputing the studies claims.  Does it say anywhere in the study the exact words, "you cannot make an accurate assessment because sample sizes are too small"


Yes they do have a methodology and weighted adjustments. All statistics have a probability of error.

http://www.bjs.gov/index.cfm?ty=dcdetail&iid=245#Methodology

Nonresponse and weighting adjustments


In 2013, 90,630 households and 160,040 persons age 12 or older were interviewed for the NCVS. Each household was interviewed twice during the year. The response rate was 84% for households and 88% for eligible persons. Victimizations that occurred outside of the United States are excluded. In 2013, less than 1% of the unweighted victimizations occurred outside of the United States and are excluded from analyses of NCVS data.

Estimates in NCVS reports typically use data from the 1993 to 2013 NCVS data files, weighted to produce annual estimates of victimization for persons age 12 or older living in U.S. households. Since the NCVS relies on a sample rather than a census of the entire U.S. population, weights are designed to inflate sample point estimates to known population totals and to compensate for survey nonresponse and other aspects of the sample design.

The NCVS data files include both person and household weights. Person weights provide an estimate of the population represented by each person in the sample. Household weights provide an estimate of the U.S. household population represented by each household in the sample. After proper adjustment, both household and person weights are also typically used to form the denominator in calculations of crime rates.

Victimization weights used in analysis of NCVS data account for the number of persons present during an incident and for high-frequency repeat victimizations (or series victimizations). Series victimizations are similar in type but occur with such frequency that a victim is unable to recall each individual event or describe each event in detail. Survey procedures allow NCVS interviewers to identify and classify these similar victimizations as series victimizations and to collect detailed information on only the most recent incident in the series.

The weight counts series incidents as the actual number of incidents reported by the victim, up to a maximum of 10 incidents. Including series victimizations in national rates results in rather large increases in the level of violent victimization; however, trends in violence are generally similar regardless of whether series victimizations are included.

In 2013, series incidents accounted for about 1% of all victimizations and 4% of all violent victimizations. Weighting series incidents as the number of incidents up to a maximum of 10 incidents produces more reliable estimates of crime levels, while the cap at 10 minimizes the effect of extreme outliers on the rates. Additional information on the series enumeration is detailed in the report Methods for Counting High Frequency Repeat Victimizations in the National Crime Victimization Survey, NCJ 237308, BJS web, April 2012.

Standard error computations

When national estimates are derived from a sample, as with the NCVS, caution must be taken when comparing one estimate to another estimate or when comparing estimates over time. Although one estimate may be larger than another, estimates based on a sample have some degree of sampling error. The sampling error of an estimate depends on several factors, including the amount of variation in the responses, and the size of the sample. When the sampling error around an estimate is taken into account, the estimates that appear different may not be statistically different.

One measure of the sampling error associated with an estimate is the standard error. The standard error can vary from one estimate to the next. Generally, an estimate with a small standard error provides a more reliable approximation of the true value than an estimate with a large standard error. Estimates with relatively large standard errors are associated with less precision and reliability and should be interpreted with caution.

In order to generate standard errors around numbers and estimates from the NCVS, the Census Bureau produced generalized variance function (GVF) parameters for BJS. The GVFs take into account aspects of the NCVS complex sample design and represent the curve fitted to a selection of individual standard errors based on the Jackknife Repeated Replication technique. The GVF parameters are used to generate standard errors for each point estimate (such as counts, percentages, and rates) in reports using NCVS data.

BJS conducts tests to determine whether differences in estimated numbers and percentages in  reports using NCVS data are statistically significant once sampling error is taken into account. Using statistical programs developed specifically for the NCVS, all comparisons in the text of reports are tested for significance. The Student’s t-statistic is the primary test procedure, which tests the difference between two sample estimates.

Data users can use the estimates and the standard errors of the estimates provided in  reports to generate a confidence interval around the estimate as a measure of the margin of error. The following example illustrates how standard errors can be used to generate confidence intervals:
According to the NCVS, in 2013, the violent victimization rate among persons age 12 or older was 23.2 per 1,000 persons (see table 1 in Criminal Victimization, 2013, NCJ 247648, September 2014). Using the GVFs, it was determined that the estimated victimization rate estimate has a standard error of 1.6 (see appendix table 2 in Criminal Victimization, 2013, NCJ 247648, September 2014). A confidence interval around the estimate was generated by multiplying the standard errors by ±1.96 (the t-score of a normal, two- tailed distribution that excludes 2.5% at either end of the distribution). Therefore, the 95% confidence interval around the 23.2 estimate from 2013 is 23.2 ± (1.6 X 1.96) or (20.0 to 26.3). In others words, if different samples using the same procedures were taken from the U.S. population in 2013, 95% of the time the violent victimization rate would fall between 20.0 and 26.3 per 1,000 persons.

BJS also calculates a coefficient of variation (CV) for all estimates, representing the ratio of the standard error to the estimate. CVs provide a measure of reliability and a means to compare the precision of estimates across measures with differing levels or metrics. In cases where the CV is greater than 50%, or the unweighted sample had 10 or fewer cases, the estimate is noted with a “!” symbol (Interpret data with caution. Estimate based on 10 or fewer sample cases, or the coefficient of variation is greater than 50%).
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Al Doggity on December 19, 2014, 11:14:38 AM
Does it say anywhere in the study the exact words, "you cannot make an accurate assessment because sample sizes are too small"


Yes: (Interpret data with caution. Estimate based on 10 or fewer sample cases, or the coefficient of variation is greater than 50%).

That is exactly what that means. That wall of text you just posted is almost wholly irrelevant to the discussion. This one line is all you need to know. The sample size  is too small to make accurate assessments. contained right there in the report.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Al Doggity on December 19, 2014, 11:15:55 AM
Check out this thread I started a few minutes ago:
http://www.getbig.com/boards/index.php?topic=561440.0


Pretty much everyone is in agreement. That's what that passage means. But keep going. You know your a bullshit artist.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 19, 2014, 11:18:10 AM

Yes: (Interpret data with caution. Estimate based on 10 or fewer sample cases, or the coefficient of variation is greater than 50%).

That is exactly what that means. That wall of text you just posted is almost wholly irrelevant to the discussion. This one line is all you need to know. The sample size  is too small to make accurate assessments. contained right there in the report.

Does that mean the conclusions are wrong?   They aren't saying the conclusions drawn from the data are wrong just that there is a possibility of error.  So you are saying you disputing the data?  As is, how do you interpret the data?  What are the conclusions you would draw from the data?  Would you just throw all the data out?
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Al Doggity on December 19, 2014, 11:19:59 AM
Does that mean the conclusions are wrong?   They aren't saying the conclusions drawn from the data are wrong just that there is a possibility of error.  

They don't make ANY conclusions from the data. They are just numbers. They are cautioning idiots like you from making conclusions because of the incredibly high probability of error that would be inherent in those conclusions.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 19, 2014, 11:22:33 AM
They don't make ANY conclusions from the data. They are just numbers. They are cautioning idiots like you from making conclusions because of the incredibly high probability of error that would be inherent in those conclusions.


Yes they do draw conclusions.  Thats the point.  What other reasons do you gather statistics?   What is the purpose of the study?
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: LittleJ on December 19, 2014, 11:32:21 AM
Poor Archer,  nobody likes him :'(
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Al Doggity on December 19, 2014, 11:44:17 AM

Yes they do draw conclusions.  Thats the point.  What other reasons do you gather statistics?   What is the purpose of the study?

 ::)  Then what conclusions did the study come to?

The purpose of the report was SOLELY to gather statistics. That was it. There were no conclusions sought. The fact that they now have these statistics can be used in other areas.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Archer77 on December 19, 2014, 11:52:27 AM
::)  Then what conclusions did the study come to?

The purpose of the report was SOLELY to gather statistics. That was it. There were no conclusions sought. The fact that they now have these statistics can be used in other areas.


For what purpose are the statistics gathered?   What are statistics designed to do? 
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Al Doggity on December 19, 2014, 11:53:39 AM

For what purpose are the statistics gathered?   What are statistics designed to do? 
What conclusions did the study come to?
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: dr.chimps on December 19, 2014, 11:58:10 AM
Race guys gonna race.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Galvatron on December 19, 2014, 12:01:58 PM
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Al Doggity on December 19, 2014, 12:05:38 PM


Yeah, but according to him, the Obama administration is the cause for him breaking the law.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: dr.chimps on December 19, 2014, 12:10:34 PM

Hmmm. A hypocritical, POS. Good call.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: The True Adonis on December 19, 2014, 01:07:43 PM

This guy is a complete loser, fraud and moron.

Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Soul Crusher on December 19, 2014, 01:11:45 PM
Has absolutley zero to do with you being "cynical" about blacks and learning...
What in fucks sake are you rambling on about.

stick to one train of thought chief and lets discuss that

And on another note. Not all blacks are the same. Not all think the same and not all have gone through the same life experiences that shape thought patterns. Once you stop with the idiotic lumping, the world will open up for you

Sorry to break this to you - but most would not trust you around anything not bolted to the floor or covered under the insurance policy.  Just how it is 
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: LittleJ on December 19, 2014, 02:16:02 PM
Sorry to break this to you - but most would not trust you around anything not bolted to the floor or covered under the insurance policy.  Just how it is 

Do you trust the black gbers?
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Hulkotron on December 19, 2014, 02:58:44 PM
This guy is a complete loser, fraud and moron.



I generally do not trust people who wear glasses (except for Nasser) and especially if they are Indian.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: oldgolds on December 20, 2014, 06:42:38 AM
This guy is a complete loser, fraud and moron.



D'Souza speaks the truth....Something Blacks and liberals despise...They live in a giant fantasy World...
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: dr.chimps on December 20, 2014, 06:45:19 AM
Sorry to break this to you - but most would not trust you around anything not bolted to the floor or covered under the insurance policy.  Just how it is  
Coming from a guy who squealed like a pig, and changed his Getbig handle, when he got some tv attention? Just how it is.  :-\
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: The True Adonis on December 20, 2014, 10:15:46 AM
D'Souza speaks the truth....Something Blacks and liberals despise...They live in a giant fantasy World...
::)

Not even close.
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: Devon97 on December 20, 2014, 07:15:30 PM


Wasn't he the one who dissected the obama camp like a frog in a biology lab.... and the obama new world vision?
Title: Re: Oldest black college 9% graduation rate
Post by: obsidian on December 20, 2014, 10:23:05 PM
This guy is a complete loser, fraud and moron.

He is half right. Blacks perform poorly in education / intelligence related endeavors mainly because of genetics and their culture is determined by their intelligence or lack thereof. Again there are exceptions as with any race however when the bell curve is reviewed their genetics determine their success. This is just a fact. Foot stomping and temper tantrums will do nothing to change this. Take it up with mother nature. That's just the way it is. It's similar to a bodybuilder being pissed off that TREX weighed 10 tons and the bodybuilder could barely reach 280 pounds. It's just nature nothing you can do about it.