Kellogg Community College’s “Sharing the Black Experience” panel discussion event will run from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Monday, March 7, at KCC’s Binda Performing Arts Center, on campus at 450 North Ave. in Battle Creek. The event is free and open to the public.
The facilitated discussion will feature three prominent African American community leaders discussing their cultural experience.
Panelists include actor/singer Altamiece Cooper; educator Dr. Kenneth T. Jackson; and Battle Creek Community Foundation Development Officer Lynn Ward Gray. The discussion will be moderated by KCC Workforce Solutions Career Coach Tricia Griggs.
Moderator Griggs is currently working on a Master of Arts degree in Education Leadership-Higher Education/Student Affairs at Eastern Michigan University. Giving back to the youth is near and dear to her heart. Bios for each panelist follow.
Altamiece Cooper
Actor/Singer
Altamiece Cooper is a professional actor who grew up in Battle Creek. She is a Lakeview High School graduate and earned a degree in Music Theatre Performance from Western Michigan University. Shortly after leaving WMU she moved to New York City and landed a role in the 2006 national tour of the Broadway musical “Rent” as Mrs. Jefferson, which kickstarted her professional acting career. She has since performed on many different stages across the country and Canada and has been blessed to share those stages with many other talented stage and film actors. Cooper was recently seen as Nicely-Nicely Johnson in the Battle Creek Symphony Orchestra’s concert of “Guys and Dolls” and has also been a featured soloist with the Battle Creek Symphony Orchestra on multiple occasions over the years.
Cooper is extremely passionate about equity and inclusion in the arts for all people of color and especially Black and brown artists. She believes that the arts can change the world for the better.
Dr. Kenneth T. Jackson
Educator
Dr. Kenneth T. Jackson has a passion to help all children succeed. He is a 1971 graduate of Battle Creek Central High School and a 2011 BCCHS Hall of Fame inductee. Jackson is also a Vietnam Era veteran and was a member of the United States Marine Corps Presidential Honor Guard for President Richard Nixon in Washington D.C. A state champion boys basketball coach and two-time Coach of the Year, Jackson is also a retired school superintendent, a member of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity and a Third-Degree Mason. Being labeled the “troubled black kid,” statistics say he was not supposed to be where he is today.
Lynn Ward Gray
Development Officer, Battle Creek Community Foundation
Battle Creek native Lynn Ward Gray joined the Battle Creek Community Foundation in December 2007. As a development officer, Gray’s responsibilities focus on major and planned gifts at the Foundation. She also serves as staff liaison for the Battle Creek Public Schools Education Foundation Board of Directors and is a member of the Calhoun County Estate Planners Council. Gray also enjoys being the program director and host of the Foundation’s Horizons Radio program on WFPM-LP 99.5 FM in Battle Creek.
Gray was humbled and honored to serve five terms as a Battle Creek City Commissioner from November 2009 to November 2020, representing Ward 2 and serving as the city’s Vice Mayor from November 2014 to November 2015. She also ran a focused and inspiring campaign for mayor in 2020. Gray continues to serve her community as chapter president for the Battle Creek Alumnae Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc., a public service sorority founded in 1913 at Howard University in Washington, D.C.; as vice chair on the City of Battle Creek Planning Commission; and on a host of other boards, committees and commissions.
Gray resides in her hometown with her husband, Samuel A. Gray, a retired Navy chief petty officer and equally engaged community and veterans’ advocate.
For more information, contact KCC’s Student Life office at 269-565-2634 or studentlife@kellogg.edu.