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Black Alumni/ae of MIT

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Greetings ...
Under Networking tab - please find new space for Alumni Business Networking and Member Weblinks. Please register in order to access the Forum.  To post feedback - click here.   Roy '78   haygood@alum.mit.edu 

BAMIT Membership
  • Recent graduate - Free
  • Regular - $50
  • Life - $1000

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BAMIT Supports the MIT Educational Council (EC) Program
Undergraduate and graduate alumni of MIT may participate in Educational Council work read more ...

BAMIT Supports the MIT Institute Career Assistance Network (ICAN)
The purpose of ICAN is to provide alumni to alumni, and alumni to student support for networking and career advising read more ...

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Funding

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Scholarships, Grants, Funding and Fellowships
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Zuckerman Fellowships at Harvard University
This fellowship, established through a gift from Mortimer B. Zuckerman, responds to the need by enabling students who are already enrolled in, or who have recently graduated from, professional degree programs in medicine, law, or business to pursue an additional degree at one of Harvard's public service schools: the John F. Kennedy School of Government, the Graduate School of Education, or the School of Public Health.  read more ...

Gates named MLK Visiting Professor in Physics

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Sylvester James Gates Jr. ‘73, PhD ‘77, a physicist and mathematician renowned for his pioneering work in theoretical physics and for his commitment and creativity in communicating scientific concepts, has been named Martin Luther King, Jr., Visiting Professor in Physics for 2010-2011. MIT News link

Tuskegee University - Architecture department status elevated, named for legendary architect Taylor

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  TUSKEGEE, Alabama (July 30, 2010) – In a final action prior to his departure, Dr. Benjamin F. Payton, President of Tuskegee University, announced today that the Board of Trustees approved his recommendation to elevate the Department of Architecture at Tuskegee University to School status.

Simultaneously, the Board named the unit the Robert R. Taylor School of Architecture, in honor of the first black to graduate in architecture from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Taylor accepted the task to set up the architecture program at Tuskegee in 1892, at the invitation of the institution's founder, Booker T. Washington. Taylor's handiwork is seen all over the historic district of the campus and in the history books of American architects. read more ...

Black History Project Fund (3839050)

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The project’s overall objective is to place the black experience at MIT in its full and appropriate context, by pulling together and disseminating a varied set of materials and by exposing a larger community of interests—both inside and outside MIT—to this rich, historically significant legacy. This project seeks to identify, assemble, organize, analyze, interpret, and provide access to a broad range of materials on the black experience at MIT; to cultivate public interest in these materials; and to encourage widespread participation in studying, preserving, and disseminating them. After completing and exploring a considerable amount of information from the MIT archives and Museum, oral history—including TECHNOLOGY AND THE DREAM, a black alumni survey, and other relevant archival materials, the next phase of this project is to develop a Web-Based History of the Black Experience at MIT.

Gifts from alumni/ae and friends to support the Black History Project Fund (3839050) accepted at Giving to MIT

Spotlight on Alumni and Student Pursuits

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Africa Business Club at MIT Sloan - Investing in a new beginning
Our mission is to enlighten the MBA community of Africa’s future promise while encouraging their investment in Africa's consumer, agricultural, natural-resource, and infrastructure sectors. As a club, we strive to increase local awareness of MIT in Africa and to act as a resource to prospective students interested in attaining graduate business degrees from MIT Sloan. Finally, we aim to act as a catalyst in uniting all MIT Sloan alumni who are on the continent and/or of African descent. read more ...

Caulfield named White House Fellow
R. Erich Caulfield SM ’01, PhD ’06, a member of the MIT Corporation whose five-year term ends this month, has been chosen as one of 13 members of the prestigious 2010-11 White House Fellows program

Maya Trotz '94 - Tenure
Maya Trotz '94 (PhD Stanford '02) has received tenure at the University of South Florida in the Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering http://ce.eng.usf.edu/faculty/trotz.htm 

2010 Harold E. Lobdell '17 Distinguished Service Award Recipients

The Harold E. Lobdell '17 Distinguished Service Award recognizes service to the Alumni Association and MIT that is of significant depth over a sustained period. Lobdell's interest and commitment to MIT spanned all areas of alumni relations. BAMIT members included this year include:

  • Martin N. Mbaya ’00
  • Darcy D. Prather ’91
 

Paula T. Hammond '84, PhD '93 presentation to President Barack Obama
Angela Belcher and Paula Hammond had the honor and privilege of receiving President Barack Obama at their laboratories. A partial video of this visit can be seen at the CNN website: President Obama learns about nanotechnology research during a tour of MIT. 

Roderic I. Pettigrew, Ph.D. ‘77, elected to the National Academy of Engineering
Roderic I. Pettigrew, Director of the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering, has been elected to the National Academy of Engineering. Dr. Pettigrew was recognized for “the use of MRI in human blood-flow studies and leading advancements in bioengineering research and education as the initial director of NIBIB.” read more ...

NASA Administrator Names Woodrow Whitlow Associate Administrator for Mission Support
WASHINGTON -- On Wednesday (03FEB10), NASA Administrator Charles Bolden named Dr. Woodrow Whitlow, Jr., the associate administrator for Mission Support at NASA Headquarters in Washington. Whitlow will continue to serve as the director of NASA's Glenn Research Center in Cleveland until a successor is named. In this new position, Whitlow will be responsible for most NASA management operations, including human capital, budget and systems support as well as a variety of other vital cross agency business, institutional and contract support functions. read more ...

Report of the Initiative for Faculty Race and Diversity

The first part of the report contains the introduction, and the summary of each of the major findings and our recommendations for future action; it is also important to read the second part of the report, which is the research component including details from the interviews, survey and cohort analysis that are very revealing about life at MIT and the challenges we face in moving toward the goal of a more open and inclusive environment at MIT. -- Paula T. Hammond '84, PhD '93 - Bayer Professor and Executive Officer

Report of the Initiative for Faculty Race and Diversity
MIT faculty study finds diversity is lacking --- The Boston Globe
MIT Report Recommends New Strategies for Improving Diversity Among Faculty

 

Reggie Van Lee
President Barack Obama list of appointed 25 members to the President's Committee on the Arts and Humanities includes Reggie Van Lee '79. The President’s Committee’s commitment to cultural philanthropy and its success in engaging the public and private sectors is made possible by the expertise and leadership of its private and federal members, who embody and represent the diverse elements of the U.S. interdependent system of support for the arts and humanities. read more ...

Randal Pinkett
In 2005, Randal Pinkett SM ’98, MBA ’98, PhD ’02 won season four of The Apprentice. So how has his life changed as a result? And what was it like working for Donald Trump for a year? Read on to find out. read more ...

MIT Awards Convocation - 2009 Ronald McNair Scholars

 

 

Timan Goshit ’09 | Aisha A. Bobb-Semple ’09 | Brandon Reese ’09 | Matthew Gethers ’09

Established by BAMIT in 1986, the Fund is named in honor of Dr. Ronald E. McNair '77, the black NASA astronaut and MIT alumnus who lost his life in the space shuttle Challenger explosion on January 28, 1986. Dr. McNair's commitment to excellence and service in the black community are qualities that the Fund recognizes and rewards in black MIT undergraduates. (for 2.5mb hi-res image click here)       read more ...


Nasa Astronaut Robert L. Satcher, PhD, MD

Nasa Astronaut (and BAMIT member) Robert L. Satcher, PhD, MD is part of the team that launched into space on STS-129 at 2:28 p.m. EST - Nov. 16, 2009. Satcher was selected as an astronaut in 2004. He earned a doctorate in chemical engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He also is a graduate of Harvard Medical School. He was born in Hampton, Virginia.

Astronaut Robert Satcher Jr. works outside the International Space Station as he participates in space shuttle Atlantis’ first spacewalk of mission STS-129, as construction and maintenance continue on Nov. 19, 2009.   NASA via Reuters

 

Welcome Home Bobby!

STS-129 Mission Information | http://twitter.com/Astro_Bones | HarvardScience

Historical coverage of Bobby by MIT and Harvard

Click here for really cool images from the NASA Image Gallery ...

Bobby on YouTube ...

This just in from Jinx Hinton '77 ...

Folks might like to know that the ISS can be seen with the naked eye. It looks like a very bright star traveling across the sky. www.heavens-above.com shows the current position of ISS and will give you a list of all passes for the next 10 days. The link under ‘Satellites” that says ’10 day predictions for : ISS’ gives the visible passes with brightness. This link - http://www.heavens-above.com/PassSummary.aspx?satid=25544&lat=37.030&lng=-76.346&loc=Hampton gives the visible passes for Hampton, VA. You can change the location from the home page. The magnitude over the next seven nights will be as high as -3.5. Sirius, the brightest star is magnitude -1.44. Magnitudes are on a log scale so -3 is 2.51x as bright as –2; 6.3x as bright as -1. You’ll see from the chart at the above link that November 25 is a good for viewing in Hampton. It will rise in the NW at 6:18 pm, pass directly overhead (90º) at 6:21 p.m. at magnitude -3.5, and then vanish as it enters a shadow. November 27 is even better: same -3.5 magnitude, rising in the NW at 5:27 p.m., passing almost directly overhead at 5:52 p.m and setting in the SE at 17:33 p.m. (Remember, this is for Hampton; other locations will vary.)

It’s best to look with the naked eye – you have a much bigger field of view. Once you spot it, you can look through binoculars. Most telescopes will have too small a field of view to spot it before it is out of sight unless you are extremely lucky.

Happy viewing!

Jinx

 

The Babyfaced Black CEO Phenomenon - The Teddy Bear Effect
August  6, 2009 - Diapers in the boardroom—though surely the topic of a few off-color attempts at office humor—are not hallmarks of corporate excellence. But a cherub-cheeked babyface in the executive office? Depending on its hue, that face may be a naturally-endowed but subtle tool of an accomplished leader atop a seemingly impenetrable hierarchy. New research by Robert Livingston (Kellogg School of Management - Management & Organizations) and Nicholas Pearce '07 (Kellogg School of Management doctoral student) examines this intersection of face and race in corporate America. Appearing soon in Psychological Science, their work focuses on one particular facet of blacks’ ascensions to power: the physical characteristics of so-called “babyfaces” and their influence on perception and achievement. read more ...

Peter Blair Henry, Ph.D. '97, Renowned Int’l Economist, Named Dean of NYU’s Stern School of Business
NYU President John Sexton and Provost David McLaughlin today named Peter Blair Henry – the Konosuke Matsushita Professor of Economics at Stanford University – as dean of NYU’s Leonard N. Stern School of Business.  He will assume the deanship effective January 15, 2010. A Rhodes Scholar; the leader of the Obama Transition Team’s review of the International Monetary Fund, World Bank, and other international lending agencies; and an economic advisor to governments from the Caribbean to Africa, Dean-designate Henry’s scholarship focuses on the impact of economic reform on emerging economies. read more ...

S. James Gates Jr., Ph.D., '73 sworn in to the Maryland State Board of Education
ANNAPOLIS, MD July 2, 2009 Governor Martin O’Malley today swore in four new members to the State Board of Education,  three members to the University System of Maryland Board of Regents, and also swore in two members to the College Savings Plans of Maryland Board, and a new State Board of Elections appointee. read more ...

MIT Professor Paula Hammond '84, PhD '93
MIT Professor Paula Hammond (Bayer Professor of Chemical Engineering, MIT) talks about the promise of solar energy and why MIT is uniquely positioned to help realize that promise. Interview recorded 4/27/2009. read more ...

President Obama Announces Members of Science and Technology Advisory Council

April 27, 2009 -- In a speech at the National Academies today, President Obama announced the membership of the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology—a stellar team of experts who will help advance the President’s bold agenda to reinvigorate the economy while building a new and innovative foundation for a 21st Century America.

PCAST consists of 20 of the nation’s leading scientists and engineers. They will advise the President and Vice President directly to help the administration formulate policy in the many areas where understanding of science, technology, and innovation is key to forming responsible and effective policy.

Included on the team are BAMIT members Shirley Ann Jackson, Ph.D., '68 the President of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and former Chair of the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission (1995-1999) -and- S. James Gates Jr., Ph.D., '73 the John S. Toll Professor of Physics and Director of the Center for String and Particle Theory at the University of Maryland, College Park.

Many of the objectives of the Obama Administration—in the fields of energy, education, health, climate change, environment, security, and the economy—can be met only with a strong national effort in science and technology. President Obama will rely heavily on his Council of Advisors as he restores science to its rightful place in policy making.

UM Physics Professor Jim Gates Named to President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology
Shirley Ann Jackson Appointed to the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology
   PCAST_Release.pdf

 

Smithsonian Names Architect for National Museum of African American History and Culture
April 14, 2009 - Philip G. Freelon '77, FAIA, speaking on behalf of the Freelon Adjaye Bond team, said "This is an incredible time for us as designers—and this museum represents a unique opportunity to give form and substance to the powerful vision that has been established by the Smithsonian leadership. We are truly honored to have been chosen as the architects from such a distinguished list of competitors." read more ...

BAMIT 30th Anniversary Celebration

April 6, 2009 - Honoring what Chancellor Phil Clay PhD '75 called "a deep and relevant history," members of Black Alumni at MIT (BAMIT) held a semi-formal dinner in the Picower Institute Atrium on Saturday to celebrate its 30th anniversary as an organization.

BAMIT 30th Anniversary Celebration | Gallery

 

Creating a Sustainable Pipeline

by Calvin Hennick (Diverse Issues in Higher Education - February 18, 2009)
When Dr. James L. Sherley began a hunger strike outside the Massachusetts Institute of Technology provost’s office in February 2007 alleging racism in his tenure denial, the then-associate professor of biological engineering re-ignited, in a very public way, concerns about the institution’s commitment to diversity.

The lack of diversity has been a recurring problem at MIT. At the time of Sherley’s protest, just 27 of MIT’s 740 tenured faculty members were American Indian, Black and Hispanic. Today, there are 34 underrepresented minorities out of 767 tenured faculty members.

Sherley never won tenure, and a Black faculty member and a Black former trustee broke their ties to MIT as well in protest over the manner in which the school handled the Sherley incident as well as its seeming lack of commitment to diversity. Two years later, the administration is taking steps to ensure the school is welcoming to faculty members of color — an effort some say is moving too slowly. read more ...


Archive

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Changing the DNA of reality
By S. James Gates Jr., Ph. D. '73 January 20, 2009
My work as a scientist is national and international in scope, so I am constantly speaking with people in many venues. During the summer of 2007, I was in Beijing, and walking the streets was a stunning experience. I kept having a sense of deja vu. As it was my first visit, this could not have been caused by memory. Eventually it struck me: It felt like walking in a major U.S. city in the early 1960s. I had caught the sense of a nation that was confidently moving toward its future. read more ...

Darryl M. Fraser, '80
March 15, 2008 -  Northrop Grumman Corporation elected Darryl M. Fraser, '80, corporate vice president, Communications. In this capacity, he has responsibility for the Corporation's worldwide communications strategy and execution, including media relations, employee communications, advertising, executive communications and branding/corporate image. On Saturday, February 21, 2009, he delivered the keynote address at the Black Engineers Conference, Deans of Engineering, Historically Black Colleges and Universities Breakfast. A copy of his speech can be found at read more ...

25 Most Stylish Bostonians of 2008 -- Larry Sass, Ph.D.
Larry Sass, Ph.D., 44, MIT architecture professor. "My style is a mix of architecture and science; I'm an architect with science envy. I love the laboratory environment. I love the precision of science, the culture and tools of scientists, how organized it appears." read more ...

Agents Invade Fantasy Basketball
November 6, 2008 - For far too long, fantasy owners have treated professional athletes like pieces of meat. But one imaginative fantasy player has given these athletes, or at least their avatars, the gift of bargaining power. Mock GM, the brainchild of Ngozika Nwaneri '01, has taken fantasy basketball and tilted it on its head. His idea: offer a fantasy game where owners can't just arbitrarily pick up and drop free agents. Instead, salary caps restrict their rosters. Even more radical, player contracts are negotiated by fantasy players acting as agents within the game. This all started improbably on a Detroit Pistons message board that Mr. Nwaneri has run since 2000. read more ...

Pines is New Dean of Clark School of Engineering
October 24, 2008 - College Park, Md - The University of Maryland today announced the appointment of Dr. Darryll J. Pines as Dean of the A. James Clark School of Engineering and the Nariman Farvardin Professor of Engineering, effective January 5, 2009. read more ...

Professor Herek Clack, Ph.D. '87 - Reducing Toxic Mercury
October 16, 2008 - Illinois Institute of Technology Professor Herek Clack has developed a new combustion laboratory and established a research group investigating mercury control technologies that reduce emissions of toxic mercury from coal combustion. read more ...

Art and Science, Virtual and Real, Under One Big Roof
September 23, 2008 -  Troy, New York - On a hillside overlooking this college town on the banks of the Hudson, the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute has erected a technological pleasure dome for the mind and senses. Eight years and $200 million in the making, the Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center, or Empac, resembles an enormous 1950s-era television set."What you do is a function of what you want to do," said Shirley Ann Jackson '68, a physicist and president of Rensselaer since 1999. read more ...

Hammond named Bayer Professor in Chemical Engineering
December 14, 2007 - Paula Hammond has been named the MIT Bayer Professor in Chemical Engineering thanks to a three-year, $300,000 grant from the Bayer Foundation. read more ...

The 'Campus CEO' - CNN Interview
November 3, 2007 - Dr. Randal Pinkett, winner of "The Apprentice," calls himself an entrepreneur, author, scholar and community servant. read more ...

Megachurch’s pastor a visionary and business executive
October 9, 2007 - McBath, 47, grew up in Tennessee, where he started preaching at 13 in the Pentecostal Church of God. A farm lad who strung tobacco and baled hay, he earned grades high enough to attract top university recruiters. He took an offer from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and studied nuclear engineering and humanities. read more ...

Liskov, Harris to share new leadership position for faculty equity
September 7, 2007 - Barbara Liskov, Ford Professor of Engineering in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, and Wesley Harris, Charles Stark Draper Professor of Aeronautics and Astronautics and currently head of the Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics, have been selected to share the office of Associate Provost for Faculty Equity, Provost L. Rafael Reif announced on Sept. 7. read more ...

Kristala Jones Prather, Ph.D. - Tech Review 35 - 2007 Young Innovator
August 15, 2007 - Kristala Jones Prather, a MIT assistant professor of chemical engineering, is developing a promising strategy for synthesizing commercial molecules biologically, from start to finish. read more ...

Shirley Ann Jackson, Leader in Higher Education, to Receive the Vannevar Bush Award
Shirley Ann Jackson, Ph.D. '68, who has led a national movement to respond to what she calls a "quiet crisis" in the science and engineering work force, will receive the Vannevar Bush Award for a lifetime of achievements in scientific research, education and senior statesman-like contributions to public policy. Currently, Jackson is president of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI) and the first African-American woman to receive the Bush award in its 27-year history. read more ...

Dr. Julianne Malveaux is Appointed Bennett College for Women’s 15th President
March 26, 2007 - The Bennett College for Women Board of Trustees announced the appointment of Dr. Julianne Malveaux '80 as the 15th President of Bennett College. Recognized for her provocative, progressive and insightful observations, Malveaux, is an economist, author and commentator. Described by Dr. Cornel West as “the most iconoclastic public intellectual in the country”, Dr. Malveaux’s contributions to the public dialogue on issues such as race, culture, gender, and their economic impacts, are helping to shape public opinion in 21st century America. read more ...

Imara Project: Making a Difference
March 20, 2007 - Aisha Walcott, a graduate student at MIT in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS), recently traveled to Laare, Kenya as a representative of the Imara outreach program, which was funded by a grant from the MIT Public Service Center. Her mission was to teach educators and other residents of the small rural village how to use computers, to help put in place strategies for sustaining the technology center and to ensure that it had the greatest impact possible. read more ...

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Career Opportunities

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MIT Sloan Associate Director, MBA Career Education and Advising
Position Responsibilities: To provide career planning assistance/education for 800 MBA and LGO (Leaders for Global Operations) students. Will work with the senior associate director and the MBA Career Education team to provide advising within a generalist model of delivering services. This includes the evaluation and review of current offerings and the creation and delivery of career seminars for both large and small groups. read more ...