Mississippi Today
IHL hires national firm for Jackson State president search
The Institutions of Higher Learning Board of Trustees has once again selected Academic Search, an executive headhunting firm, to help it find the next president of a public university in Mississippi.
This time, the board has hired Academic Search to help trustees pick a permanent replacement for Thomas Hudson at Jackson State University. The decision was made at the board’s meeting last week. The contract has not been finalized, but an IHL spokesperson said Academic Search would be paid $115,000.
Hudson resigned in mid-March after the board placed him on administrative leave with pay, making him the third permanent president in a row to step down from Jackson State. Unlike his predecessors, it is still not known why Hudson resigned from the top job at Mississippi’s largest historically Black university.
Elayne Hayes-Anthony has been filling the post in the interim. Hayes-Anthony has been over Jackson State’s Department of Journalism and Media Studies. In March, Hayes-Anthony told reporters that she was interested in becoming Jackson State’s permanent president and would apply for the position.
At on-campus listening sessions held by the board last month, only one community member mentioned they’d like to see Hayes-Anthony permanently take the job. But it was resoundingly clear that community members wanted IHL to conduct a national search.
Carrine Bishop, a faculty member whose family has deep roots at JSU, put it the most bluntly: “Stop hiring your friends,” she told trustees. “We need to vet every individual.”
Hudson, who had been appointed interim president in the wake of William Bynum Jr.’s resignation, was elevated in an expedited search at the end of 2020. Trustees did not conduct a national search before appointing Hudson permanently.
In Mississippi, business has been booming for Academic Search. In the last year, the IHL board has hired the firm to assist with the presidential searches at Delta State University and University of Southern Mississippi.
Despite contracting with the search firm, trustees ultimately opted not to do a national search at USM and voted to appoint Joe Paul, who had been the interim president Academic Search never posted a formal announcement for the position.
But at Delta State, the board’s pick, Daniel Ennis, applied for the job after seeing the posting on Academic Search’s website.
The board paid Academic Search $85,000 for the Delta State search. IHL’s initial contract with Academic Search was for $130,000, but it was amended after the board cut the search short.
READ MORE: ‘Stop hiring your friends’: JSU community speaks up in listening session for next president
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
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Mississippi Today
On this day in 1906
Jan. 22, 1906
Pioneer aviator and civil rights activist Willa Beatrice Brown was born in Glasgow, Kentucky.
While working in Chicago, she learned how to fly and became the first Black female to earn a commercial pilot’s license. A journalist said that when she entered the newsroom, “she made such a stunning appearance that all the typewriters suddenly went silent. … She had a confident bearing and there was an undercurrent of determination in her husky voice as she announced, not asked, that she wanted to see me.”
In 1939, she married her former flight instructor, Cornelius Coffey, and they co-founded the Cornelius Coffey School of Aeronautics, the first Black-owned private flight training academy in the U.S.
She succeeded in convincing the U.S. Army Air Corps to let them train Black pilots. Hundreds of men and women trained under them, including nearly 200 future Tuskegee Airmen.
In 1942, she became the first Black officer in the U.S. Civil Air Patrol. After World War II ended, she became the first Black woman to run for Congress. Although she lost, she remained politically active and worked in Chicago, teaching business and aeronautics.
After she retired, she served on an advisory board to the Federal Aviation Administration. She died in 1992. A historical marker in her hometown now recognizes her as the first Black woman to earn a pilot’s license in the U.S., and Women in Aviation International named her one of the 100 most influential women in aviation and space.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Stories Videos
Mississippi Stories: Michael May of Lazy Acres
In this episode of Mississippi Stories, Mississippi Today Editor-at-Large Marshall Ramsey takes a trip to Lazy Acres. In 1980, Lazy Acres Christmas tree farm was founded in Chunky, Mississippi by Raburn and Shirley May. Twenty-one years later, Michael and Cathy May purchased Lazy Acres. Today, the farm has grown into a multi seasonal business offering a Bunny Patch at Easter, Pumpkin Patch in the fall, Christmas trees and an spectacular Christmas light show. It’s also a masterclass in family business entrepreneurship and agricultural tourism.
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This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
On this day in 1921
Jan. 21, 1921
George Washington Carver became one of the first Black experts to testify before Congress.
His unlikely road to Washington began after his birth in Missouri, just before the Civil War ended. When he was a week old, he and his mother and his sister were kidnapped by night raiders. The slaveholder hired a man to track them down, but the only one the man could locate was George, and the slaveholder exchanged a race horse for George’s safe return. George and his brother were raised by the slaveholder and his wife.
The couple taught them to read and write. George wound up attending a school for Black children 10 miles away and later tried to attend Highland University in Kansas, only to get turned away because of the color of his skin. Then he attended Simpson College in Indianola, Iowa, before becoming the first Black student at what is now Iowa State University, where he received a Master’s of Science degree and became the first Black faculty member.
Booker T. Washington then invited Carver to head the Tuskegee Institute’s Agriculture Department, where he found new uses for peanuts, sweet potatoes, soybeans and other crops.
In the past, segregation would have barred Carver’s testimony before Congress, but white peanut farmers, desperate to convince lawmakers about the need for a tariff on peanuts because of cheap Chinese imports, believed Carver could captivate them — and captivate he did, detailing how the nut could be transformed into candy, milk, livestock feed, even ink.
“I have just begun with the peanut,” he told lawmakers.
Impressed, they passed the Fordney-McCumber Tariff of 1922.
In addition to this work, Carver promoted racial harmony. From 1923 to 1933, he traveled to white Southern colleges for the Commission on Interracial Cooperation. Time magazine referred to him as a “Black Leonardo,” and he died in 1943.
That same year, the George Washington Carver Monument complex, the first national park honoring a Black American, was founded in Joplin, Missouri.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
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