Events celebrate character, courage, commitment
MURFREESBORO — Journalist
Soledad O’Brien headlines two months of events in observance of National
Women’s History Month at MTSU.
The theme of this year’s festivities is “Celebrating Women
of Character, Courage and Commitment.”
O’Brien will be the keynote speaker at 7 p.m. Wednesday,
March 26, in the Student Union ballroom. Her topic will be “Diversity: On TV,
Behind the Scenes and In Our Lives.”
The reporter joined CNN in 2003, anchoring “American
Morning” and “Starting Point with Soledad O’Brien.” Her coverage of the 2010
Haitian earthquake on CNN’s “Anderson Cooper 360” earned her an Emmy Award in
2011. Her “Black in America” series was one of CNN’s most successful
international franchises.
O’Brien moved to Al Jazeera America in 2013. She will produce
short-form segments to the network as a special correspondent to its prime time
magazine program “America Tonight.” In addition, O’Brien contributes reports to
“Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel” on HBO.
• NASA engineer Aisha Bowe will deliver the Women in
Science Invited Lecture at 7 p.m. Monday, March 3, in Room S305 of MTSU’s
Business and Aerospace Building.
Bowe is an aerospace engineer at Ames Research Center in
Moffett Field, Calif. Her work focuses on developing methods to maintain safe
separation of air traffic and optimize fuel consumption within an automatic
system.
• “Serving the Local Community: Women in Murfreesboro City
and Rutherford County Governments” is slated for 5 to 7 p.m. Thursday, March
20, in MTSU’s Tom Jackson Building.
This discussion will include panelists Laura Bohling,
Rutherford County circuit court clerk; Donna Scott Davenport, Rutherford County
juvenile court judge; Joyce Ealy, commissioner, District 19, Rutherford County
Commission; Madelyn Scales Harris, councilwoman, Murfreesboro City Council; and
Lisa Nolan, Rutherford County finance director. The moderator will be MTSU
professor emerita Dr. Ayne Cantrell.
• Anti-domestic violence activist Mark Wynn will talk
about stalking in domestic violence incidents and on college campuses from 6 to
8 p.m. Wednesday, April 2, in Room S102 of the Business and Aerospace Building.
• Members of the LGBT community will celebrate
diversity at “SpringOut! Pride Week” Monday, April 7, through Saturday, April
12. The highlight will be the second SpringOut! DragOut!, which is scheduled
for 7 p.m. April 12 in the Tennessee Room of MTSU’s James Union Building.
Tickets are available by contacting mtlambda@mtsu.edu.
• The culmination of the National Women’s History Month
celebration will be the inaugural “Women of Character, Courage and Commitment
Gala” from 6 to 8 p.m. Saturday, April 26, in the Tennessee Room of the James
Union Building.
This dinner will recognize women and men in the MTSU
community and in Rutherford County who have been advocates for women’s rights
and who have shown great character, courage and commitment to the cause.
Ticket information is available by calling Valerie Avent,
assistant director of the June Anderson Center for Women and Nontraditional
Students, at 615-898-5725 or valerie.avent@mtsu.edu.
Each year, the MTSU Women’s History Month Committee produces
buttons depicting an accomplished woman of historic importance. The buttons for
this year’s National Women’s History Month celebration feature pioneering civil
rights and women’s rights activist Sojourner Truth.
Born into slavery in 1797, Truth won three lawsuits, very
unusual for a black woman of her time. One of those victories enabled her to
retrieve her son, Peter, from a slaveholder who had purchased him illegally.
She delivered her most famous address, “Ain’t I a Woman?,”
at a women’s rights convention in Akron, Ohio, in 1851. In the speech, Truth
asserted that women deserved equal rights with men because they were equally
capable.
For more information about these and other events, contact
Barbara Scales, director of the June Anderson Center, at 615-898-2193 or barbara.scales@mtsu.edu.
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