Dr. Ira Berlin, author and professor of history at the University of Maryland, will discuss the connections between slavery and the building of the university.
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was an icon of the civil rights movement, preaching nonviolence in the struggle for racial equality. A prime mover of the Montgomery bus boycott, the first president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, and closing speaker in the historic 1963 March on Washington, King is one of the most revered figures in American history. He was the youngest recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize, and his achievements had an impact worldwide. Bill Grimmette is a living history interpreter, storyteller, actor, and motivational speaker who has performed throughout the United States and abroad. He has researched and performed the characters of W. E. B. Du Bois, Frederick Douglass, Benjamin Banneker, Estevanico, and Augustus Washington. He has appeared at the Smithsonian Institution and on National Public Radio. He has an M.A. in psychology from the Catholic University of America, and has done post-graduate work in education at George Mason University.
Join us one hour before each presentation of Fortune's Bones: The Manumission Requiem for background and discussion. You do not need a ticket to the performance to attend the discussions.
Who was Fortune? In life, he was an African-American slave who served a doctor in post-Colonial Waterbury, Connecticut. In death, he became a medical specimen and later a walk-by exhibit at the Mattatuck Museum, a skeleton known only as "Larry." But Fortune was also a husband, a father, and a human being. In 2004, Connecticut poet-laureate Marilyn Nelson published "Fortune's Bones: The Manumission Requiem," a book-length poem commissioned by the African American History Project Committee in Waterbury. They commissioned Dr. Ysaye M. Barnwell set the text to music. Her cantata, performed by a full symphony, three choirs, seven soloists, and a chorus of African bells, is the centerpiece of a performance that celebrates the fullness of African-American life. ($40 ticket price). Pre-performance discussion at 7pm is free.
Join us one hour before each presentation of Fotune's Bones: The Manumission Requiem for background and discussion. You do not need a ticket to the performance to attend the discussions.
Who was Fortune? In life, he was an African-American slave who served a doctor in post-Colonial Waterbury, Connecticut. In death, he became a medical specimen and later a walk-by exhibit at the Mattatuck Museum, a skeleton known only as "Larry." But Fortune was also a husband, a father, and a human being. In 2004, Connecticut poet-laureate Marilyn Nelson published "Fortune's Bones: The Manumission Requiem," a book-length poem commissioned by the African American History Project Committee in Waterbury. They commissioned Dr. Ysaye M. Barnwell set the text to music. Her cantata, performed by a full symphony, three choirs, seven soloists, and a chorus of African bells, is the centerpiece of a performance that celebrates the fullness of African-American life. ($40 ticket price). Pre-performance discussion at 2pm is free.
Prince George’s Community College’s 2010-2011 Lecture Series continues with the third of six talks illustrating interdisciplinary links between the sciences and the humanities and other fields. Accidental discovery or invention is widely acknowledged as a fact in modern science and technology. How can such unpredictable and uncontrollable events be key elements in a system that commands budgets, laboratory, personnel, and organization of such extraordinary size that it is one of the most distinctive products of the twentieth century? Dr. Robert Friedel takes a closer look at the “accidental” nature of one of these—the discovery of the form of carbon known as “fullerenes,” recognized by the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1996—and illustrates just what an interesting role serendipity plays in modern science, much as it does in other disciplines. Free and open to the public, will be followed by a question-and-answer session, as well as a reception.