My Mentors

Tribute To My Mentors

People Who Helped to Nourish My Early Adult Career Development.

Jewel Limar Prestage, Distinguished Professor Emeritus and Dean Emeritus, School of Public Policy, and Urban Affairs – Southern University, Baton Rouge; and Distinguished Professor of Political Science, Retired, Prairie View A&M University: Dr. Prestage was one of my most distinguished professors during my freshman year at Southern University, chairing my Freshman Honors Colloquium class which was made up of a cross-section of students who were valedictorian or salutatorian of their high school classes or other honor students who had scored extremely high on the college entrance examinations. Colloquium was a weekly research seminar which focused on us, the world of Political Science and some other general subjects, all above the characteristics of the traditional curriculum programs.  We all were impressed by how astute, articulate, and knowledgeable Dr. Prestage was in the Political Sciences of our world and how she led us toward agile responsibilities for patriotism for our nation.  When Dr. Prestage heard of my challenges in the Federal Government, she wrote me a letter in 2007, which I shall always cherish.  She wrote: “Your high-level academic achievements coupled with your strong stand on ethical and professional principles are representative of the goals undergirding the Honors program and I applaud your long-term commitment not only in theory but in your life’s work.  I remember you were not reluctant to speak up in Colloquium and therefore I am not totally surprised that you have become a “change agent” – a creature of conscious -one who moves in tune with the beat of a different drummer!”  The letter of support and encouragement has meant so very much to me and I hold its content dear to my heart from a giant of a professor, from my roots, who first gave me my critical insights into the need for leadership agility in the Volatile, Uncertain, Complex and Ambiguous (VUCA) world that I would soon inherit in my future career life.  Dr. Prestage helped to frame my vision for the citizenry.

Father August Louis Thompson, Priest and Pastor of St. Charles’ Catholic Church in Ferriday, Louisiana: I met Fr. Thompson during my first year of teaching mathematics at Sevier High School there.  Fr. Thompson graciously gave me instructions to become a Catholic and baptized me into the Catholic Church.  He was the first priestly shepherd in my life and no other priest to this day has been able to replicate what Fr. Thompson has meant to me.  Whether I was far or near, In-country or overseas, Fr.  Thompson was always there for me to listen to my challenges, and he took me through many cultural and spiritual battles and often carried me through the five stages of grief during times of family losses.  His inspiration, prayers and his views opened doors for catalytic changes in the volatile and uncertain world in which I lived.

I shall always remember him as a replacement figure for fatherly advice since my dad had died at the end of my junior year of high school.

Mr. Anthony M. (Tony) Valletta, Program Executive Officer and SES (Senior Executive Service), U.S. Army:  I was his first Procurement Advisor when he was Program Executive Officer (PEO) Standard Army Management Information Systems (STAMIS).  Mr. Valletta quickly recognized my capabilities and my commitment to his mission, which generated trust in my expertise and my advice.  As a Role Model in Public Service, Mr. Valetta jump-started my journey toward becoming a member of the Senior Executive Service (SES).  He believed that I had the potential to manage and lead in the development of the government’s major information and weapon systems and with that insight he made sure that aside from my major contributions to his Program and Project Managers, that I also would be given the time to become proficient in the totality of Program/Project Management skills by sponsoring me to attend the Defense Systems Management College’s Project Management Course in 1990.  He trusted me to be his procurement and contracting problem-solver, representing him on many critical issues at his various field sites, to hear the issues and use my critical thinking abilities to help resolve them to his satisfaction.  It is nothing like having a trusting boss who generates trust in you with his staff.

Mrs. Barbara Hopkins, Chief, Public Affairs, U.S. Army Material Command-Europe:  Barbara Jean Hopkins took me under her wings when I arrived in Europe and became the Procurement Advisor for the Commanding General, Army Material Command-Europe, located at Hammonds Barracks, Seckenheim, Germany  Barbara immediately saw my character and sweet spirit as too vulnerable for the group that I had to advise and protect the integrity  of the Federal Government Procurement Process, so she felt she needed to help toughen me up for success in my new endeavor.  As I look back on my early experience with Barbara, I see now that she was not only equipping me for my new job in Europe, but she equipped me for the long unknown job in my future for the environment I had to deal with 15 years later at the US Army Corps of Engineers.  Barbara forged strength in me in my family life; in dealing with difficult people in my work; and gaining fortitude to withstand whatever adversarial conditions I had to endure.  She often reminded me to “give myself permission to become angry and fight back” – for that I shall be forever grateful.  Barbara was the lady in my adult life who forced me to embrace fortitude – strength of mind allowing one to endure pain and adversity courageously.

Dr. Christine Hayes Chapman Minor, the first African American female tenured Professor at Louisiana State University (LSU) in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, in 1976, two years prior to her death at only 46 years old in 1978; with a Doctoral Degree in Linguistics and Chaucerian English.  Dr. Minor was my oldest sister, 12 years my senior, who gave me the determination early in my life that “I CAN be what anyone else is or can be.”  I adopted her “I Can” philosophy: symbolized by an “I Can” can she gave me to set on the table beside my bed (a pink-painted can with a metal “eye” on a rod welded in its center).  I learned from her: “The world steps aside for anyone who knows where she is going” and because of the “I Can” philosophy my sister instilled in me, my challenge in life has never been “Can I”—but “When.”  My sister set an extremely high bar of excellence for her five siblings.  She was my English teacher in my junior and senior years of high school.  She made me perform serious orations, like the “Death of Madame Defarge” from A Tale of Two Cities.  Even today I can recite the Prologue to the Canterbury Tales in Chaucerian English.  She was an Academician, a Scholar, a student motivator, and a sought-after renown speaker in her field.  I was a strong competitor of my sister’s accomplishments with a 12-year difference in our ages.  In 1950. My sister graduated Valedictorian of her class.  In 1962, 12 years after my sister graduated Valedictorian of her high school class, I also graduated as Valedictorian of my high school class.  I also went to Southern University in Baton Rouge, Louisiana and graduated in 1965 in three years as my sister had done a dozen years before me.  I finished with the class ahead of my 1966 class, graduating #1 in that class with Magna Cum Laude distinction.  I had also completed a teaching Bachelor of Science degree, but in Mathematics instead of English.  Like my sister, I pledged Delta Sigma Theta Sorority in the Alpha Tau Chapter of Southern University, making us also “sisters” in Delta Sigma Theta.  All that I did was to follow my sister’s footsteps and the high bar of excellence she set for us all.  Even today, I am presently serving as Assistant Professor, Mathematics at Northern Virginia Community College.  In her short life she laid out extraordinary goals for me.

The Bunny Greenhouse Effect!

According to Google, “The Greenhouse Effect is the process by which radiation from a planet’s atmosphere warms the planet’s surface to a temperature above what it would be without this atmosphere”. 

In my life, I have tried to personify the Greenhouse Effect metaphor by radiating the needed energy that helped me achieve the early family creed set by my parents: ‘to be the best of whatever you are and be all you can be’.  I thanked God for that energy as I traveled in a most dynamic military environment, touching lives and improving every organization that I was privileged to serve.