University of Maryland Eastern Shore Makes Golf History UMES inducted into the African American Golfers Hall of Fame
UMES media relations 06/08/10

PRINCESS ANNE, MD-The University of Maryland Eastern Shore (UMES) was

recently inducted into the African American Golfers Hall of Fame (AAGHOF) at

ceremonies held in Palm Beach Gardens, Fla. It joined such legendary professional

golfers as Jim Dent, Ann Gregory, Gary Player, Jack W. Nicklaus, Pete Brown, James W.

Black, James Garvin, William "Bill" Powell, Selina Johnson, Calvin Peete and others.

"The university has been accorded this honor because it is the only Historically

Black College and University--among a total of only 20 other institutions worldwide--

certified by the Professional Golfers Association of America to offer the PGA Golf

Management Degree Program," said Malachi Knowles, founder, AAGHOF.

UMES was cited as a 2010 Founders Awardee for launching its PGA program in

2008; the PGA of America authorized the program in 2007, and in 2009, the program

was accredited by the Accreditation Commission for Programs in Hospitality

Management.

Dr. Thelma B. Thompson, president, University of Maryland Eastern Shore, was

in Palm Beach Gardens, home of the African American Golfers Hall of Fame and

national headquarters of the PGA of America, to accept the honor. She was accompanied

by Dr. Ernest Boger, who chairs the UMES Hotel and Restaurant Management

Department (in which the PGA Program resides), and William C. Dillon, director of the


PGA Golf Management Program, both of UMES. AAGHOF Founder Knowles worked

diligently with Boger and others to help UMES from day one to receive the program.

Thompson presented the keynote address for the Hall of Fame's Conference. "We

are honored to be associated with the PGA and to be forever linked with legendary

golfers from this country and abroad," she said. "We warmly thank the African

American Golfers Hall of Fame for the distinction they have bestowed upon us: it's not

every day that a land-grant college on the Eastern Shore of Maryland is inducted into a

Hall of Fame! We are quite proud of our PGA Golf Management Program because we

are enabling new generations to build productive and rewarding golf careers and to spend

their lives enjoying the game they love." Avis L. Brown-Riley, AAGHOF National

Advisory Board chair and San Diego Inner City Golf Foundation, stated, "her speech was

outstanding." Brown-Riley said, "We will redouble our efforts to insure the success of

the UMES program."

Dillon describes UMES' PGA Golf Management curriculum as a "unique mixture

of academics and athletics." Accepted students who complete the program's requirements

graduate as members of the PGA. The key, he believes, is "preparing students for the

realities of the industry." That's why degree requirements include having a USGA

handicap of 12 strokes or less, as well as studying hotel and restaurant management and

academic basics, such as English, mathematics and economics. By learning every aspect

of the golfing business, graduates are virtually assured of prospering in the industry and

sport they are passionate about, and as Dillon notes, "that's doing something special."

When it partnered with UMES, a school in which a little more than three-quarters

of undergraduates are African American, the PGA assured a diverse talent pool for its

future work force. The historic recognition given to UMES by the African American


Golfers Hall of Fame validates the PGA's wisdom. Boger termed the recognition of

UMES' PGA Golf Management Program as a "diversity 'game-changer' in preparing

professionals for success in the 'business' of golf. The university accepts this challenge in

the spirit in which it was issued."

Thompson issued a proclamation to memorialize the university's induction. She

declared Tuesday, June 15, to be African American Golfers Hall of Fame Day at the

university.

Marshall Cropper, director of the UMES Golf Academy and Dr. Ronald Forsythe

Jr., UMES' vice president for technology and commercialization, were instrumental in

helping to establish the golf management program.

There is one final and satisfying detail to this institutional achievement. Also

inducted into the Hall in 2010, and hailed as a "pioneer," is the late Eugene Jack

Adderley. To many of his countrymen in the Bahamas he was simply known as "Mr.

Golf." Adderley's two daughters, Annamae and Eugenie, are now students in UMES'

PGA Golf Management Program.