Bless The Mic is a contemporary spin on the traditional President's Lecture Series. These events, held on hundreds of campuses across the country, have been a way to stimulate the intellectual discourse on the campus. Even today, these series seek to bring in noted scholars, authors, politicians and public intellectuals to expose not only the campus community to their ideas and concepts, but the broader community in which the institution resides. These lectures also serve as an opportunity to hopefully expose the institution to a segment of the community that may have never interacted with the institution. Notable speakers are able to bring excitement to an area, and if they are published authors, their appearance is also an opportunity to stimulate interest in reading. The problem with most of these series is that they have the tendency to become stale, stuffy, dry, and well, boring. For many students, while a lecture on quantum physics might be required for their major, it is not seen as a good way to spend an hour on a Tuesday night. Today's students, many of whom are members of the Millennial Generation, have grown up in a high tech,fast-paced society that unfortunately has entertained them too often. Even the traditional college lecture, where the “sage on the stage” reads from their notes, loses today's student. Bless The Mic seeks to provide a mix of speakers who will either have a tremendous ability to communicate with the hip-hop generation (broadly defined as Black youth culture including college students and young professionals, but today includes a more diverse group of young people), or who have studied areas that are of importance to this group. Even the title of this lecture series is an attempt to reach this generation, as the phrase “Bless The Mic” is used to acknowledge rappers with exceptional lyrical skills. These lectures should then be of interest to parents, high school and college teachers, lawmakers, clergy, activists, and anyone interested in understanding contemporary issues. Walter M. Kimbrough, the first college president from the hip-hop generation, has designed this series with these facts in mind. Experienced in developing lecture series, he coordinated a university's Centennial lecture series that drew 400 to 2,500 people per event. The initial goal for Bless The Mic is to host 200 to 600 people per event, each being free and open to the public. Special efforts will be made to advertise the lectures to area high school and college students, as well as corporations and organizations with interest in the lecture topics. |
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2005 , 7 p.m. , ML Harris Auditorium Dr. Michael Eric Dyson, Avalon Foundation Professor in the Humanities, and Professor of Religious Studies and Africana Studies, at the University of Pennsylvania TUESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 2005 , 7 p.m. , Kendall Center Dr. Thomas Shapiro , Pokross professor of law and social policy, Brandeis University 'sHeller School for Social Policy and Management FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2005 , 7 p.m. , Kendall Center Professor Kimberle Crenshaw Professor of Law, UCLA and Columbia Law Schools THURSDAY, JANUARY 26, 2006 , 7 p.m. , ML Harris Auditorium Ann Coulter , New York Times bestselling author TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 2006 , 7 p.m. , ML Harris Auditorium MONDAY, MARCH 27, 2006 , 7 p.m. , Kendall Center Roslyn Brock , Vice Chairman, NAACP COST: All lectures are free and open to the public |