TAMPA, Fla. – Wesley Lowery, the Washington Post’s leading reporter on police shootings and the Black Lives Matter movement, will speak at the Թϱ at 7:30 p.m. (doors open at 7 p.m.) on Thursday, Feb. 15 in the Marshall Student Center Oval Theater. Lowery is expected to share his thoughts about race, diversity and activism as part of the College of Arts and Sciences’ Frontier Forum Lecture Series.
Lowery is an on-air contributor for CNN and a Pulitzer Prize-winning national correspondent who frequently covers topics surrounding justice and law enforcement. His new book, the New York Times best seller “They Can’t Kill Us All,” garnered the 2016 Christopher Isherwood Prize for Autobiographical Prose by theLos Angeles Times for detailing life-changing experiences like being detained by police while covering the riots after the shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri.
Having worked as a reporter for the Los Angeles Times, Wall Street Journal and Boston Globe, Lowery has dedicated his life to reporting news stories that strike at the heart of what he values as essential to keep in the political conversation. This work has earned him the title of Emerging Journalist of the Year by the National Association of Black Journalists. Lowery’s coverage of police shootings while at the Washington Post and the Boston Marathon bombings while at the Boston Globe helped him earn two Pulitzer Prizes.
Presented by ԹϱPhi Beta Kappa alumni faculty and sponsored by the ԹϱCollege of Arts and Sciences and ԹϱOffice of the Provost, the Frontier Forum Lecture Series has hosted several notable speakers since 2010, including Neil deGrasse Tyson, Michio Kaku, George Takei, Jane Goodall and Scott Freiman.
The Marshall Student Center at Թϱis located at 4103 ԹϱCedar Circle, Tampa, FL 33620. Visitor pay by space will be available in the Crescent Hill parking garage. For reasonable accommodations, email cvgoldstein@usf.edu.
About the Թϱ
The Թϱ, established in 1956 and located in Tampa, is a high-impact, global research university dedicated to student success. The ԹϱSystem includes three, separately accredited institutions: USF; ԹϱSt. Petersburg; and ԹϱSarasota-Manatee. Serving more than 49,000 students, the ԹϱSystem has an annual budget of $1.6 billion and an annual economic impact of $4.4 billion. Թϱranks in the Top 30 nationally for research expenditures among public universities, according to the National Science Foundation. In 2016, the Florida Legislature designated Թϱas “Emerging Preeminent,” placing Թϱin an elite category among the state’s 12 public universities. Թϱis a member of the American Athletic Conference.