Monday, July 30, 2012

Zimbabwean-Born Businessman Commits $6.4 Million to Send 40 African Students to Morehouse

Econet Wireless Cbairman Strive Masiyiwa with
incoming Morehouse College African Students
(Photo Courtesy Morehouse College)
ATLANTA, Georgia - Nigena Hamim knew exactly why he wanted to leave the African nation of Burundi and come to the United States to attend Morehouse College.

“I have a dream of fighting ethnic divisions in my country and I am encouraged to realize my vision…After all, I believe that I was born at a time like this to serve and develop my community.”

Zimbabwean-born businessman and philanthropist Strive Masiyiwa is helping to make Hamim’s dream a reality. Hamim is one of 10 students – two from Burundi and eight from Zimbabwe – who will be attending Morehouse on full, four-year scholarships, beginning this fall.

They are the first class of the new Ambassador Andrew Young International Scholars program. Masiyiwa, founder and chairman of Econet Wireless, wants African students to earn a world-class education that they can take home with them after graduation. Forty African students in all – representing an investment of $6.4 million – will go through the program.



Masiyiwa believes Morehouse and Atlanta, the center of the civil rights movement with leaders such as Ambassador Andrew Young, will be the perfect place for the students to develop.

“For us, the civil rights movement and our fight against colonialism was almost synonymous,” he said. “We knew people like Ambassador Young and Martin Luther King Jr. I remember reading about King and his life, and of course I got to know about Morehouse and the fact that he had been here and (HBCUs) were very proud institutions. So I got to know about Morehouse fairly early and it really resonated in the struggle that we were involved in.

“What I want to see coming from the student who comes out of the Morehouse system is a much more confident, self-assured, more complete young man who is not struggling to find out who he is in the world,” he said.

The 10 students, some of the top students in their countries, were chosen from a larger pool of 20 young men, chosen by Capernaum Trust, the education arm of Masiyiwa’s Higher Life Foundation.

“Mr. Masiyiwa and his wife really have a heart for seeing talented students who have leadership potential go get the best education in the world and then come back to Africa to lead the kind of changes they want to see on the African continent,” said Philip Howard ’87, vice president for Institutional Advancement.

“They hope the young men will bring the kinds of 21st -century management, leadership, social justice, civic engagement, all those things Morehouse provides, back to the continent to lead Africa into the 21st century.”

Howard; William Bynum, vice president for Student Services; and Kevin Williams ’85, dean of Admissions, flew to Zimbabwe to interview the 20 students in June. Ten were chosen, though the other 10 received scholarships to a South African university.


CNN's Don Lemon talks to Morehouse College senior Derrius Quarles about helping students tap into scholarships.

“All of them, without fail, talked about returning home to do something related to their fields to improve the conditions of their fellow countrymen,” said Bynum. “I’m very excited about these young men. They are academically talented, driven, and once they make that cultural adjustment, the sky’s the limit on what they can achieve.”

The students arrive in Atlanta on Aug. 5, four days before New Student Orientation so they can adjust to their new surroundings. All will have American roommates in the College’s Dubois International House residence hall.

Spelman College officials will observe the Morehouse program this year as Masiyiwa will send 10 female students to Spelman next year.

For now, the 10 young Africans are ready to take advantage of their time at Morehouse.

“I expect Morehouse to help me become the agent of positive change in the community and in people’s lives,” said Abel Gumbo.

By ADD SEYMOUR JR. COURTESY MOREHOUSE COLLEGE

2012 Labor Day Classic: PV Panthers vs. TxSU Tigers



ASU to play at Soldier Field against Kentucky State

CHICAGO, Illinois — Albany State football players got an experience of a lifetime last season when they played in the Circle City Classic against Kentucky State at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis. This year, the Rams are going a little more north and a little more historic.

The Rams will play Kentucky State in the 15th annual Chicago Football Classic at Soldier Field on Sept. 29, making one of the longest road trips in the history of the program.



“The players were very excited last year when we went to Indy where the Super Bowl was and where the Colts played, and I expect them to feel the same this year,” said ASU coach Mike White, who played against the Chicago Bears at Soldier Field when he was a defensive lineman in the NFL three decades ago. “I think they will look forward to the trip. How we get there is a question I have been asked several times.”

Transportation was White’s biggest concern when the Rams played in Indianapolis last October, and he remained uneasy about it when talking about this year’s trip.

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Sunday, July 29, 2012

SWAC teams ‘motivated’ as practice starts

BATON ROUGE, Louisiana - The poll released at Southwestern Conference Media Day on July 16 represented one of the last gasps of speculation that fuels football fans during the offseason, but a few coaches in the room were happy to use it for their purposes as well.

Southern coach Stump Mitchell, whose Jaguars were picked fourth in the five-team SWAC West, made extra sure his players saw that prediction, and it made an impact.

“It brings up a bit of anger inside of me because I know we shouldn’t be in this position,” defensive tackle Casey Narcisse said. “But we got ourselves here, and all we have to do is get in a dog fight and win it all out so six months later we’ll be crowned champs.”

Though the first punches in that fight are a little more than a month away, the SWAC’s teams will begin lacing up their gloves in the next few days.  With the exception of Texas Southern, which will hold its first ...



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Barbarino gives FAMU Rattlers high marks

TALLAHASSEE, Florida - Still trying to catch his breath after completing the final dash of a shuttle run Thursday morning, Florida A&M freshman defensive end Caleb Helms walked into the direction of strength and conditioning coach Russell Barbarino.

“My legs are about to explode, coach,” the former North Florida Christian standout told Barbarino. “Oh yeah,” Barbarino responded, stop-watch and time charts in hand with a whistle around his neck as he kept an eye on the next group of runners.

Several other groups went through the shuttle drill, one of the many physical tests that the entire FAMU football team will go through next week. The players who ran Thursday, providing they passed, will skip the run when testing begins Monday as a prelude to the start of pre-season camp on Aug. 8.

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S.C. State Bulldogs have a rallying cry after summer practice

ORANGEBURG, South Carolina  --  Time will tell if South Carolina State will regain the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference football title this season. From an overall physical health standpoint, team strength and conditioning coach Trumain Carroll is ready to declare the Bulldogs championship-ready.

“The team is in a lot better shape actually than they were last year,” Carroll said. “The volume has increased dramatically. We took those guys up. They’re doing probably 30 percent more work in probably 20 percent shorter time. They just responded to it great.”



A total of 78 returning players and incoming freshmen participated in the monthlong workouts held during the Summer II session at S.C. State. Four times a week — two days in the weight room and two days on Willie Jeffries Field at Oliver C. Dawson Stadium — the players were put through the rigors physically in preparation for the upcoming season.

Donations raised from the “Lift-The-Bulldog” campaign made the workouts possible for the third straight year. Yet for the investment to pay dividends, Carroll said ...

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ASU AD: Bigger schools ‘scared’ to play Rams on football field

ALBANY, Georgia — Albany State’s 2012 football schedule is one of the toughest in recent years. Before the Rams enter their grueling conference schedule, they will be battle tested with a trio of non-conference games against three teams that are no strangers to postseason success.

On Friday, ASU interim Director of Athletics Richard Williams said he has tried to make that schedule even tougher. During the annual Quarterback Club Football Kickoff Reception, Williams said he has tried to add several larger schools — such as Division I Alabama State — to ASU’s schedule.

The only problem, Williams said to a room full of supporters, is that those larger programs are scared.

“I’ve been approached often with the (question), ‘Why don’t we play the FAMUs, the Bethune-Cookmans and the Norfolk States?’ ” Williams said. “If you can understand, because we have had such a rich tradition and rich history of Golden Ram football, to be honest they are scared. They are scared that someone from Albany, a smaller program but mighty in force, to come down and run the gamut on them.”



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