• North Carolina A&T Alumni in the News

    Charles H. Moore Legacy Society to Induct 16 Honorees on Sept. 8 

    Established in 2011, the Charles H. Moore Legacy Society was created to recognize and to thank the individuals who have invested in North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University’s future through a planned gift. On Sept. 8, the society will induct 16 honorees who have made a commitment to the university during a ceremony at the North Carolina A&T Farm Pavilion The legacy society is named in honor of Professor Charles H. Moore, who was instrumental in the founding of the state A&M College for Negro youth, through dedicating his time, talent, and assets to the efforts to bring the college to Greensboro, N.C. Through personal contributions and his fundraising…

  • North Carolina A&T Alumni in the News

    N.C. A&T Alumni Reunion Weekend Kicks Off with the Largest Reunion Class to Date

    The N.C. A&T Office of Alumni Reunion would like to recap the unforgettable moments we shared during the Alumni Reunion Weekend for the Golden Class of 1973 and Silver Class of 1998. This was the largest reunion weekend with nearly 400 participants that traveled as far as from Los Angeles, California, Phoenix, Arizona, Chicago, Illinois to North Carolina that convened during May 11-14, 2023. It was an absolute pleasure to witness the nostalgia, and joy that filled the air as Aggies from these two remarkable classes came together once again to reminisce, connect, and celebrate. The weekend kicked off with a campus tour and Welcome Celebration that set the tone…

  • North Carolina A&T Alumni in the News

    Bluford Library Archives: 100 Years of Noble Hall

    Noble Hall is one of the grand brick buildings on the historic north district of North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University. Its foundation was laid in 1922 and was completed in 1923, Noble was originally the “Agricultural Building” and has been the home to our outstanding School of Nursing for 70 years! All of A&T’s historic buildings constructed prior to 1922 like the Old Dudley Hall (built in 1893) and the North Dormitory (1895) were demolished or destroyed by fire decades ago. Therefore, Noble is not only our oldest building but also the first structure in A&T history to stand for 100 years! The origins of Noble Hall and…

  • North Carolina A&T Alumni in the News

    Happy 90th Anniversary to the Alpha Nu Chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Inc. 

    On April 14, 1933, the Alpha Nu Chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Incorporated was established at the Agricultural and Technical College of North Carolina. It was the 36th chapter, and the first of four chapters established that year by the growing brotherhood. The charter members of the Alpha Nu Chapter were Vincent A. Burgess, William W. Capeheart, James E. Charlton, Curl C. Grifin, Robert L. Harbison, Luther A. Kaiser, H. B. Short, and John T. Speller.  The chapter’s first advisor was Dr. Wadaran L. Kennedy, (W. L. Kennedy Drive on the A&T Campus), a longtime professor of agriculture and the first African American to earn a Ph.D. in dairy husbandry.…

  • North Carolina A&T Alumni in the News

    N.C. A&T Alumnus Willie Deese Honored with the Distinguished Citizenship Award from the North Carolina Chamber

    Willie A. Deese ‘77, a champion for North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University and a retired pharmaceutical executive, received the Distinguished Citizenship Award from the North Carolina Chamber on March 22. The award was presented to Deese at the 81st Annual Meeting in Raleigh, N.C. that convened business leaders across the state. Deese is a highly successful senior executive with an extensive background as a member of a global Fortune 200 company leadership. He has actively interacted with corporate boards as a functional senior leader at Merck and GSK and is currently serving as a director on four domestic and international company boards − with extensive audit, governance, and…

  • North Carolina A&T Alumni in the News

    N.C. A&T Alumna, Gwendolyn Highsmith-Quick, to Retire After 38 Years in Aggieland

    Gwendolyn Highsmith-Quick, Ph.D., CPA ‘76 – affectionately known as “HQ” – is currently an associate professor in the Department of Accounting and Finance at North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University since 1986. She will retire from Aggieland on June 30, 2023, with 38 years of service. Highsmith-Quick, a native of Wallace, North Carolina, the oldest of five children and a first-generation college student, initially had her heart set on attending the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. That plan changed when N.C. A&T’s then-President Lewis C. Dowdy sent her a letter congratulating her for having a high SAT score and offering her a presidential scholarship with a full…

  • North Carolina A&T Alumni in the News

    N.C. A&T Alumna Celebrates Nearly 51 Years as a Professor at Aggieland

    Growing up in Green Level, North Carolina, Etta Gravely, Ph.D., ‘68 was determined to go to college as a first-generation student when she attended Howard University, in Washington, D.C. for undergraduate. However, she could never imagine the impact she would make as a chemistry professor for 50 years at North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University. In 1956, Gravely met her husband, Clinton Gravely, at Howard University. After they graduated in 1960, the couple relocated to Greensboro, North Carolina, where he became an architectural firm owner, to start a life together. “Once my husband and I settled back in Greensboro, I found it hard to get a job as a…

  • North Carolina A&T Alumni in the News

    Bluford Library Archive – Becoming Justice Henry Frye Part II

    When Lt. Henry Ell Frye graduated from the Agricultural and Technical College of North Carolina in May 1953, and he went into military service, he was far from done with Aggieland or the city of Greensboro. Through civil service, his law practice, teaching, fundraising and volunteering, Justice Frye has given continuously to this community for over 70 years.  In a 1955 edition of the old “Alumni Newsletter,” which predates the “A&T Today”, Lt. Frye was listed as one of the youngest alumni donors for the university. He would eventually serve on the executive committee and as parliamentarian for the North Carolina A&T State University Alumni Association, Inc. In 1972, due…

  • North Carolina A&T Alumni in the News

    Planned Giving in the African American Community

    The African American community has a strong tradition of giving its time, talent, and treasure to others. Historically, these gifts have gone to churches, a donor’s alma mater, and civic organizations such as the Urban League and NAACP. According to the 2016 U.S. Trust Study of High Net-Worth Philanthropy, African American households give 25% more of their discretionary income to charitable organizations and causes than their white counterparts. Despite this culture of giving, when I first mention planned giving to many individuals, they initially balk at the idea due to a belief that it is only for extremely wealthy donors. However, a planned gift can simply be any major gift made…

  • North Carolina A&T Alumni in the News

    The Aggie Legacy of Chief Justice Henry E. Frye (Part I)

    Very few alumni in the history of North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University represent Aggie excellence as highly as Chief Justice Henry E. Frye ‘53. The son of farmers from Ellerbe, North Carolina, emerged from four years of study at the Negro Agricultural and Technical College of North Carolina to become the first of many historic accomplishments. Frye was the first African American to complete the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill three-year law program in 1959, the first Black assistant district attorney in the United States in 1963, the first African American in North Carolina’s House of Representatives in the 20th Century in 1968, and our state’s…