Here is this week’s news of grants and gifts that may be of particular interest to women in higher education.
Two Spelman College alumnae and sisters, Erin Johnson Tolefree and Cara Johnson Hughes have made two gifts on behalf of their family business, Baldwin Richardson Foods to the women’s college in Atlanta. Over a period of 10 years, the Baldwin Richardson Annual Scholarship, established at $1.5 million, will provide a first-year student with a full tuition package for their entire undergraduate education at Spelman. The second gift, establishes at $100,000 fund that will provide first-year students with supplemental tuition. The alumnae’s “generosity expands Spelman’s ability to develop Black women who can take advantage of programs like Spelpreneur, a four-year initiative that fosters entrepreneurship and innovation. We are grateful to these alumnae leaders who recognize the necessity of investing in the education of women who will create and lead innovative businesses across a spectrum of industries,” said Spelman President Mary Schmidt Campbell. Tolefree and Hughes both hold bachelor’s degrees in economics from Spelman College.
A group of chemists from Vanderbilt University have been awarded a $7.2 million grant from the National Cancer Institute to lead an initiative to better understand how chemotherapy for breast cancer targets DNA. The research team will study the chemical biology of guanine alkylation that occurs with cyclophosphamide and doxorubicin, a treatment often referred to as AC chemotherapy regimen. According to the researchers, if cyclophosphamide and doxorubicin “act synergistically, this could lead to new drugs designed to take advantage of this new mechanism.”





