By Stacy M. BrownNNPA Newswire Senior National Correspondent@StacyBrownMediaMSNBC President Rashida Jones plans to travel to Washington, D.C. in March to receive the First Amendment Award from the Radio Television Digital News Association.Although the award is among Jones’s long list of honors and accomplishments, it may pale in comparison to the celebration she is headlining at her alma mater.The Scripps Howard School of Journalism & Communications at Hampton University (SHSJU) will host its 20th anniversary celebration on February 10.The celebration commemorates the 2002 donation of $10 million from the Scripps Howard Foundation, a gift made during the tenure of the Foundation’s former president and chief executive officer, Judith Clabes, an advocate for journalism and journalism education excellence.The Foundation, the philanthropic arm of The E.W. Scripps Company for many years, is now affiliated with the newly established Scripps Howard Fund.Jones declared to the Black Press of America that, “This is a full circle moment.”“It always feels really good to go back to campus because it truly feels like home,” she added.“I try to go a few times a year, specifically at homecoming or to visit the students at the journalism school, but every time I go back to the Scripps Howard School, I think about now 20, over 20, years ago where I was standing in the grass lot, and they broke ground for what would become the excellence that the school is.” Jones continued:“And going from seeing it before it was built to seeing what they’ve done with that facility, I’m proud of what it is.“It makes me proud to be a journalist to see that a school like Hampton University has the resources to be able to train journalists. And it just reminds me of how far I’ve come.”Jones, a 2002 graduate, will receive the prestigious Achievement of Excellence Award from the SHSJC, while Jessi Mitchell of WCBS-New York and Justin Tinsley of ESPN will be inducted into the school’s Hall of Fame.Julia Wilson, the dean of Hampton’s SHSJC, said, “The students are so excited and they’re already preparing and making speeches and figuring out what they will wear.”“We’re honoring the past and celebrating the future and we’re looking at where we’ve been as a school of journalism and communications and preparing for the future – a global future,” she remarked.Wilson deemed it exciting that the institution will celebrate its “last 20 years of excellence with the anticipation of another 20 years of global innovation.”“We’ve tried to really prepare our students to compete worldwide, not local or even national, but the whole world,” she declared.“Rashida Jones is a great example and then we’ve got these rising stars whom our students want to meet, and we have outlets coming like the Washington Post and Bloomberg and our students will try and get internships and jobs at those places.”Wilson insisted that it’s crucial “that we have Black voices not only included but heard throughout this country and abroad.”She said Hampton’s new president, Darrell K. Williams, a retire