Monday, June 20, 2011

Alabama A&M Graduate Amanda Whatley was Chosen as one of the State Department's Critical Language Scholarship Recipient to Study in Turkey


HUNTSVILLE, Alabama -- Amanda Whatley leaves June 15 to spend the summer studying in Turkey under a U.S. State Department scholarship. Ms. Whatley is a Dothan Alabama native is May 2011 Alabama A&M graduate with a political science degree.

She is among 575 college students to receive the U.S. State Department's Critical Language Scholarship. Students will spend seven to 10 weeks in intensive language institutes. And the students are expected to continue their language study beyond the scholarship and apply these critical skills in their professional careers. More than 5,200 students across the country applied for the scholarship.

Whatley asserted, she chose to study in Turkey after consulting with Dr. Ronald Slaughter, chair of the Department of Behavior Sciences and associate political science professor at A&M, and other advisers. Amanda's interest in Turkey grew from Turkey's evolving socioeconomic and political role in the developing middle east.

Whatley plans to pursue a graduate degree in global sustainability at the University of South Florida when she returns from Turkey. A focus of her study will be on the use of water. Whatley hopes to return to Turkey as part of a graduate study project, looking at the application of water in dynamic country in the middle east.
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Source: Turkey News and AL.com

Urban League Honors A&M Alum & Business Professor, Dr. Larry McDaniel

Huntsville, Ala. ---- An Alabama A&M University department head in the School of Business was recently recognized for his longstanding work on behalf of the pivotal Black Executive Exchange Program (BEEP).

Dr. Larry McDaniel, AAMU alumnus and chair of the Department of Management and Marketing, was inducted into the Hall of Fame by the National Urban League Black Executive Exchange Program during the League’s recent and nearly 500-person conference in Orlando, Fla.

More than 100 students representing historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs) also attended the jobs-themed conference to observe the National Urban League’s 42nd annual Black Executive Exchange Program Leadership Conference. BEEP is the National Urban League’s longest running direct service program. It is a partnership involving the business community, government and non-profit institutions that places African American executives in classrooms at more than 80 HBCUs as visiting professors and role models.

The program’s premise is that by exposing Black college students to African American executive role models and their real-world experiences, students can become better prepared for effective corporate leadership. The program also provides a unique opportunity for professionals and corporations to give back to their communities while helping African American college students achieve their goals. The National Urban League is led by Marc H. Morial, president & CEO, and former mayor of New Orleans.

Dr. McDaniel says he is proud to become one of only 16 individuals inducted into the Hall of Fame in the program’s 42-year history. Inductees are selected based on theirs years of work and level of commitment to the success of the program.
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Source: AAMU

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

AAMU Alum's second Presidential Appointment to USDA Leadership position

Daniel Robinson was appointed to serve as State Executive Director of USDA’s Farm Service Agency in Alabama by President Barack Obama in October 2009. He served in the same capacity from 1998 to 2001 under the Clinton Administration.

Agriculture is Alabama's largest industry, contributing nearly $5 billion to the State's economy each year. With over 48,000 farms covering nine million acres, wherever you look in Alabama, you see agriculture. Some of the best agricultural products in the world are grown in Alabama, from poultry and peanuts to sweet potatoes and catfish. At least fifty different commercial crops and livestock are produced in Alabama.

USDA FSA's primary mission is to assist Alabama’s farmers and ranchers to secure the greatest possible benefit from programs administered by FSA, such as farm loans, commodity price support, disaster relief, conservation, and other available resources. The hard working men and women of Alabama’s 45 county offices are at the forefront of our efforts, and they remain the primary contact for program participation and related questions.

As Alabama began to dig out from deadly tornadoes that ripped through the Southeast, the state’s agricultural leaders met with Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack about programs to help farmers whose lives and livelihoods were impacted by the storms. Vilsack joined Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano, FEMA Administrator Craig Fugate, Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan and Small Business Administration Administrator Karen Mills on a tour of tornado-ravaged Pratt City near Birmingham where USDA FSA was at the forefront helping farmers obtain federal aid for removal, fence repair and livestock and crop losses.

Mr. Robinson brings a lifetime of agriculture experience to USDA.Mr. Robinson began his career with Alabama Farm Service Agency in 1970 and has served in various positions, including County Program Operations Specialist Trainee, County Operations Program Specialist, Agricultural Program Specialist, Chief Agricultural Program Specialist, State Civil Rights and Appeals Coordinator and State Executive Director.

During a brief period of retirement from USDA, between 2001 and 2009, Robinson
served as Assistant Marketing Director for the Alabama Department of Agriculture &
Industries, where he was responsible for within-house day-to-day operations of the
Agriculture Promotions Division. Robinson was also the Program Coordinator for the
Department’s Farmland Protection Program, whereby Federal matching dollars from
USDA/FSA were used to purchase from landowners the development rights of prime
farm land as conservation easements in perpetuity.

Robinson was born and reared on a small family farm in Coosa County, Alabama, where his family grew the traditional row crops (cotton and corn), including vegetable crops the latter years, which were marketed by way of U-Pick and “peddling.” He attended Alabama A&M University where he earned a B.S. Degree in Agriculture Education with a minor in General Science. Robinson taught junior high Science and Aerospace prior to his career with USDA.

Robinson lives in Montgomery with his wife. They have one daughter, two sons, and
three grandchildren.
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Source:USDA FSA website