Notable Faculty
Name | Department | Notability | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Na'im Akbar | Psychology | Author, Breaking the Chains and Images of Psychological Slavery | |
Amalia Amaki | History | Modern and Contemporary Art | |
Clayborne Carson | History | Executive Director, Martin Luther King Jr. Collection; Professor, Stanford University | |
Lawrence Edward Carter | Religion | Dean, Martin Luther King Chapel; Fulbright Scholar; founder, the Gandhi-King-Ikeda Community Builders Prize | |
Claude B. Dansby | Mathematics | Legendary chair, Mathematics Dept. | |
Louis Delsarte | Fine Arts | painter, muralist | |
E. Franklin Frazier | Sociology | Author, Black Bourgeoisie | |
Kemper Harreld | Music | Established the Morehouse College Glee Club | |
J.K. Haynes | Biology | 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) | President | first black President of Morehouse | |
John Hopps, Jr. | Physics | former Director, Charles Stark Draper Laboratory, MIT | |
Edward A. Jones | Foreign Language | Author, A Candle In The Dark: A History of Morehouse College | |
Benjamin E. Mays | President | Mentor to Martin Luther King, Jr.; established the institutions international academic reputation and gave rise to the Morehouse Mystique | |
Frederick E. Mapp | Mathematics | F.E. Mapp Science & Math Symposium | |
Henry Cecil McBay | Chemistry | 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 | Mathematics | "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 | Political Science | Diplomat |
Read more about this topic: List Of Morehouse College Alumni
Famous quotes containing the words notable and/or faculty:
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“Since everything in nature answers to a moral power, if any phenomenon remains brute and dark, it is that the corresponding faculty in the observer is not yet active.”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)