MURFREESBORO, Tenn. —
One of the most ambitious University
Honors College lecture series ever is scheduled for this fall at MTSU.
With a November election scheduled to determine who will
guide Tennessee for the next four years, Honors College faculty and
administrators selected “Governors:
Principles, Programs, Politics and Policies that Govern” as the theme for
the fall series.
Lectures, which are free and open to the public, begin at 3
p.m. every Monday starting Sept. 10 and continuing until Nov. 12. The lone
exception is Oct. 15 when MTSU students and faculty are on fall break.
The lectures have been a staple each fall and spring for
more than two decades, featuring topics and presenters from multiple
disciplines on and off campus. To view a PDF of the schedule and a list of the
presenters and their topics, visit http://www.mtsu.edu/honors/lecture-series/2018-fall.php.
One major change to the schedule announced Sept. 6 by the
university is the cancelation of the Sept. 20 MTSU/League of Women Voters gubernatorial forum because of
scheduling conflicts.
The lecture series is held in Simmons Amphitheatre, Room 106
of the Paul W. Martin Sr. Honors Building. To find parking, visit http://www.mtsu.edu/parking/2018ParkingMap.pdf.
All visitors are requested to use parking
meters or obtain a temporary permit from the Parking and Transportation
Services office at 1403 E. Main St., or print a visitor pass at https://mtsu.t2hosted.com;
visitor permits are $2 per day.
The series begins Monday, Sept. 10, with Davidson County
historian Carol Stanford Bucy and
MTSU Department of History Professor Emeritus Robert L. Taylor collaborating on the topic of “Early Tennessee
Governors from Blount to Browning.”
Other key presenters this fall include:
• James E.K. Hildreth,
president of Meharry Medical College in Nashville.
• David Plazas,
opinion and engagement editor at The Tennessean in Nashville.
• David McCargar,
retired associate professor in education at Tennessee State University.
• Giancarlo Guerrero,
music director with the Nashville Symphony, interviewed by Reed Thomas, MTSU director of bands and professor of music and
conducting.
• Ron Bombardi,
MTSU Department of Philosophy professor.
• Keel Hunt, MTSU
alumnus, writer/author and president and founder of The Strategy Group, a
Nashville-based public affairs firm.
The Honors Lecture Series class also will have a one-day
field trip Friday, Oct. 26, to The
Legacy Museum and National Memorial
for Peace and Justice in
Montgomery, Alabama.
Mary Evins,
associate history professor and Honors
College resident faculty member, developed the fall lecture series in collaboration
with associate Dean Philip Phillips.
She coordinates the American Democracy Project, a national initiative to
promote civic learning across academic disciplines and student engagement
crucial to lifelong citizenship.
Evins said the field trip came about from the appearance by
attorney Bryan Stevenson at
University Convocation Aug. 25. He is founder and executive director of the
Equal Justice Initiative in Montgomery, and author of “Just Mercy: A Story of
Justice and Redemption,” the Summer Reading selection for new MTSU students.
“The University Honors College is very excited this fall to
be focusing the lecture series on the important elections that we and our state
and our students will be participating in and focusing the series on governors,”
Evins said.
“By that, we mean it in the most interdisciplinary and broad
sense,” she added. “We think every student from any college will find some
subject matter that will be interesting to him or her, and it will certainly
inform us as we get ready to vote this fall.”
The lecture series is a required class for upper division
Honors College students. Honors College Dean John Vile wants the public to attend if there’s a topic that
interests them.
For more information, call 615-898-2152.
MTSU offers more than 300 undergraduate and graduate
programs. For a list, visit http://www.mtsu.edu/programs/.
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