Class of 2021 Senior Profiles: Malik Mansour Saafir
Snellville, Georgia’s Malik Mansour Saafir graduates as the top scholar in computer science with the fourth highest GPA in his class overall.
Snellville, Georgia’s Malik Mansour Saafir graduates as the top scholar in computer science with the fourth highest GPA in his class overall.
Stephen George Seymour II is a dual-degree Physics and Engineering major from Nassau, The Bahamas, with business and innovation at the core of his being.
Mokgwetsi Sizwe Chapman of Jackson, Mississippi is graduating cum laude as a cinema, television and emerging media studies major with a minor in journalism.
As a sociology major from Waldorf, Md., and the current senior class president, James Cornell Peele has put service and scholarship at the center of his work.
Gabriel Denard Cloud is a graduating Business Administration major hailing from Valdosta, Ga.
The 89th Student Government Association President, Cameron Markell Nolan, is a graduating economics major with a minor in sales from Jackson, Miss.
Nanya Rishif El is a graduating Business Administration major with a concentration in marketing from Gary, Indiana, and is also co-valedictorian for the class of 2021.
The second co-valedictorian for the class of 2021 is Kymani Joachim, a kinesiology major from Pasadena, California.
The class of 2021 salutatorian Amari Kendal Parris is a kinesiology, sports studies, and physical education major from Silver Spring, Maryland.
Jenn Sapp explores growing up in a white household without exposure to leaders like Fred Hampton, whose betrayal by an FBI informant is portrayed in the film “Judas and the Black Messiah.”
President of Morehouse College writes open letter to community and Atlanta condemning the reinstatement of Atlanta police officers who tased students from Morehouse and Spelman in 2020.
Dr. Brown’s current scholarship addresses how Black, Indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC) see the allies in their lives.
Information about face masks when coming back to the Morehouse campus
This essay reflects on the relationship between broader social movements and the lives and deaths of W. E. B. DuBois, John Lewis, and Rev. C. T. Vivian.