Baltimore Sun

New Atlanta center to help train Black entreprene­urs

- By Christine Fernando

A new center for training Black entreprene­urs will be opening in Atlanta as part of a collaborat­ion announced this week between Spelman College, Morehouse College and an advocacy organizati­on made up of business leaders.

The Center for Black Entreprene­urship is expected to start operating for the fall semester.

“In 2020 we saw an acknowledg­ment from many in the investor community that there needs to be a change, that we need to take a look at these barriers and how they are preventing talented aspiring Black entreprene­urs from reaching their full potential,” said David Clunie, executive director of the Black Economic Alliance, the advocacy group involved. “We need to give them the education, resources and opportunit­ies they need to really succeed.”

The center will be housed in Spelman’s new Center for Innovation & the Arts as well as a new building at

Morehouse.

It will include a core curriculum on business developmen­t, speakers, mentorship opportunit­ies and chances to connect with investors for the historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es that make up the Atlanta University Center Consortium: Spelman College, Morehouse College, Morehouse School of Medicine and Clark Atlanta University.

Spelman is a private women’s liberal arts college with 2,097 students, and Morehouse is a private men’s liberal arts college with 2,200 students, according to the colleges’ websites.

In addition to the in-person instructio­n for students at these HBCUs, an online program also will be available to the general public and provide certificat­ions in project management, cybersecur­ity and other business-related topics.

Morehouse President David Thomas said the new center builds on a long history of entreprene­urial spirit at these HBCUs and continues the schools’ legacies of providing opportunit­ies for economic and social mobility for their students.

He said he hopes the center will serve as a model for other HBCUs.

“What I envision is for other historical­ly Black colleges to join the CBE network so that these entreprene­urship centers are developed and connected across the country,” he said. “Collaborat­ion makes these programs stronger.”

James Johnson Jr., a professor of strategy and entreprene­urship in the UNC Kenan-Flagler Business School in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, said a wellplanne­d entreprene­urship center can be a first step toward addressing the systemic barriers Black entreprene­urs face.

Johnson said Black entreprene­urs face reduced access to capital, networking opportunit­ies and generation­al wealth that could allow them to take the risks often necessary in starting a business.

They also face racism when applying for loans or finding investors, Johnson said.

On Feb. 24, 1815, American engineer and inventor Robert Fulton, builder of the first successful commercial steamboat, died in New York at 49.

In 1868, the U.S. House of Representa­tives impeached President Andrew Johnson by a vote of 126-47 following his attempted dismissal of Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton.

In 1938, the first nylon bristle toothbrush, manufactur­ed by DuPont as “Dr. West’s Miracle Toothbrush,” went on sale.

In 1942, the SS Struma, a charter ship attempting to carry nearly 800 Jewish refugees from Romania to British-mandated Palestine, was torpedoed by a Soviet submarine in the Black Sea; all but one of the refugees perished.

In 1961, the Federal Communicat­ions Commission authorized the nation’s first full-scale trial of pay television in Hartford, Connecticu­t.

 ?? MIKE STEWART/AP ?? A center to train Black entreprene­urs is expected to open in the fall as part of a collaborat­ion between Spelman College, Morehouse College and an advocacy group.
MIKE STEWART/AP A center to train Black entreprene­urs is expected to open in the fall as part of a collaborat­ion between Spelman College, Morehouse College and an advocacy group.

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