GAAHPN
Active Board Members

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Joyce Law, Board Member

After graduating Aquinas High School in 1972, Retired Lt. Col. Joyce Law attended Augusta Technical College, where she studied electronics and found herself surrounded by Army veterans and retirees who told her about what to expect in military life. In Law’s 34 years in the military, she broke many barriers and participated in areas she never could have had she stayed in Augusta.

She enlisted in the Women’s Army Corps during the Vietnam War, which she called a pivotal time in history — not just in world history but in her personal history as well. She took part in Operation New Life in 1975 after the fall of Saigon.

During her time at Fort Shafter in Honolulu, she was recruited by the Hawaiian National Guard. Soon after Hawaii, she returned to Augusta for a stint and was accepted into the Georgia National Guard as the first African American woman commissioned as a non-medical officer.

After she retired, she took part in the Troops to Teachers program and taught special education in the Augusta area. Now she devotes herself to history as well as veteran causes. She works to ensure that African Americans who served in the military have some type of markers on their headstones, as well as completing paperwork to have American Legion Post 505 placed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Dr. Darryl Nettles, Board Member

Doris Tomblin, Board Member

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Richard Laub

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Dr. Linda McMullen

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Angela Jones, Board Member

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Vaughnette Goode-Walker’s journalism career began as a Poet, with a Poetry Corner published in the Savannah Tribune, while at Morris Brown College in Atlanta, Georgia. She took her first Journalism class at Clark College, today Clark Atlanta University. It was a Community Journalism class taught by Portia Brookins, the daughter of C.A. Scott, publisher of the Atlanta Daily World. While still at Morris Brown she combined the History/Political Science classes with her love for writing. She was writing poetry and doing “coffee house” poetry in Atlanta and Roz Abrams, a television reporter at WSBTV, heard her perform and suggested she might consider a career in radio broadcasting.

Vaughnette Goode-Walker’s broadcast career began at WBIE – Radio, in Marietta, Georgia, as a news reporter covering Atlanta City Hall and the Legislative Session of the Georgia General Assembly. She also worked part–time for the Atlanta Daily World as a typesetter and wrote stories for the paper.

Goode-Walker was among the founding members of the first chapter of the Atlanta Association of Black Journalists (AABJ). She returned to Savannah and joined WSOK Radio, as News Director and helped organize a local chapter of the Savannah Association of Black Journalists (SABJ). in the late 1970s she moved to Chicago to work as an anchor–reporter at WVON Radio. Then after a brief on air stint in Atlanta at WAOK Radio, she returned to Savannah as a reporter at WTOC TV, then Savannah’s I-95 Radio after a brief stint at WHCJ Radio, Savannah State University’s Radio Station. Vaughnette Goode-Walke joined the Radio and Television News Directors Association (RTNDA) in the 1980’s.

In 1988 Goode-Walker was hired as a Newswriter/Assignment Editor for the ABC Radio Networks. Nine years later, she returned to Atlanta and worked as a Newswriter at the CNN Radio Network, eventually joining CNN Domestic as a News Writer and working as a producer for the CNN College Television Networks. Goode-Walker worked as Newswriter for CNN International in Atlanta and later Headline News. In 2006, coming full circle she joined the Savannah Tribune, and later worked as Managing Editor for the Savannah Business Journal. She currently produces a four hour weekly radio talk show, “Bitter Sugar” with Host Miguel Lorne, on BESS 100 FM, in Kingston, Jamaica. The program Live streams on the Internet and covers cultural topics related to the African Diaspora.

Vaughnette Goode-Walker, Board Member