Upcoming Events
Gallery East - Nursing Department's 50th Anniversary Exhibit
Arts/Entertainment
September 23 – October 9 Reception, September 23, 6-8 PM, just outside of the gallery.
The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope
Exhibition
Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.
"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.
Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.
African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection
Exhibition
"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.
Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction
Exhibition
During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.
Business Week: Ice Cream Social
Social/Networking
Come enjoy some Aggie Ice cream and learn how the career coaches can help you get the job of your dreams!
Graduate Student LGBTQ+ Support Group
Workshop/Training
This group is an opportunity for LGBTQA students to get together, learn from, and support each other. Each week, we will discuss pertinent issues (i.e. coming out to parents, the challenges of balancing academics and dating, relationship challenges, self-acceptance, advocate burn out, etc.). The topic of the day will be motivated by those who participate that day. This group will be co-facilitated by a psychologist from USU Counseling and Psychological Services (CAPS) and a staff from the USU Inclusion Center.
Contact CAPS to sign a service agreement and receive the Zoom link.
CIDI Workshop - Improve the Canvas Student Experience
Workshop/Training
Learn quick and easy practical tips to make sure your content more usable and easy to learn for the students in your course. In this workshop we will go over how to:
· Get rid of extra content in your course and simplify your course navigation.
· Get rid of broken links and make sure your content is published.
· Embed and caption your videos to make them more usable for everyone.
· Provide content in user-friendly formats that work well on mobile devices.
Curriculum Committee Meeting
Meeting
Monthly Curriculum Committee Meeting
EPC Committee Meeting
Meeting
Monthly EPC Committee Meeting
Master of Human Resources Sips & Tips Open House
Social/Networking | Student Recruiting
Thinking about what you want to do after you graduate? Launch a successful Human Resource career with a F500 company! Great salary potential ($85,000 Avg) and 95% placement rates! Join us for a mocktail party and network with our current students, staff, and faculty.
BREX Finance Info Session
Information/Orientation
Learn about BREX's brand new Finance Rotational Program. Looking for Dec 2020 grads. RSVP here to attend.
Voting Rights 1870, 1920, 1965, 2020 Symposium - Dr. Selina Gallo-Cruz
Conference/Seminar | Year of the Woman
Dr. Selina Gallo-Cruz (College of the Holy Cross)
Invisibility, Resistance, and Women's Political Power
Moderated by Dr. Angela Diaz
Voting Rights 1870, 1920, 1965, 2020 Symposium - Dr. Selina Gallo-Cruz
Conference/Seminar
Dr. Selina Gallo-Cruz (College of the Holy Cross)
"Invisibility, Resistance, and Women's Political Power"
Moderated by Dr. Angela Diaz
October 1, 2020, 5:00 p.m.
Mentorship Kickoff
Social/Networking
Come and enjoy playing a game with your fellow aggies, win prizes and get vouchers for free Aggie ice cream. You will also be meeting your mentor or menties to help you through college! Take the survey and get all the details on when and where!
Mentorship Kick-off!
Social/Networking
Join the E-council and get involved in the mentorship program as a peer mentor or as a mentee.
Covey Leadership Fellows Book Club
Meeting
Refreshments provided.
Study the lives and practices of some of histories greatest leaders, then discuss and apply the principles with the Covey Leadership Fellows.
Join the Covey Leadership Fellows now to participate in our monthly book discussion.
Fall books:
September - Lean In: Women, Work, and the Will to Lead, Sheryl Sandberg
October - The Boys in the Boat, Daniel James Brown
November - How to Win Friends and Influence People, Dale Carnegie
Leadership Forum: Dr. Teppo Felin from University of Oxford
Panel Discussion/Presentation | Focused Friday
Please join us for this special opportunity to hear from Dr. Teppo Felin. Dr. Felin is a Professor of Strategy and the Academic Director of the Diploma in Strategy and Innovation at Saïd Business School at the University of Oxford. His areas of expertise include strategy, entrepreneurship and innovation, complex systems and competitive advantage. His award-winning research has been published in top journals and is highly acclaimed. Register here to attend this event.
Gallery East - Nursing Department's 50th Anniversary Exhibit
Arts/Entertainment
September 23 – October 9 Reception, September 23, 6-8 PM, just outside of the gallery.
Backpack to Briefcase: What You Need to Know About Digital Meetings
Workshop/Training | Focused Friday
Join Eric Hadfield with Northwestern Mutual to discuss aspects of digital meetings that everyone should know. This goes beyond basic virtual meeting etiquette and dives into various Zoom and computer settings, lighting set up, and more. This will come just in time for some of those virtual interview spots we are sure you landed thanks to your hard work at the expo! Join us live on the Huntsman School YouTube Channel.
Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction
Exhibition
During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.
The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope
Exhibition
Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.
"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.
Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.
African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection
Exhibition
"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.
Backpack to Briefcase: Virtual Interviews Tips & Tricks
Workshop/Training | Focused Friday
Long before COVID-19, Goldman Sachs and other companies have been using virtual interviews for at least the initial round of interviews. Watch this session with Richelle Medellin, VP of University Relations at Goldman Sachs, to learn tips and tricks for virtual interviews. Don’t put yourself at a disadvantage from other candidates simply because you weren’t prepared. Join us live on the Huntsman School YouTube Channel.
PoBev Snacks!
Arts/Entertainment
We will be handing out snacks on the TSC fountain plaza
CHaSS Banking Panel
Special Event
Please join us on Friday, October 2 for a special alumni presentation at 12:30pm MST. If you’re a CHaSS major who’s never considered a career in banking, perhaps you should. CHaSS Alumni go on to enjoy any number of careers in a variety of industries. And yes, that includes banking and finance!
This virtual event will feature Justin Barnes (BA Law & Constitutional Studies ’14), Megan Goettsche (MHR ’18, BS Communication Studies ’14), and Tabitha Perkins (BS Social Work ’07). As a Bank Secrecy Act Risk Analyst for Finwise Bank, Justin is experienced in anti-money laundering, fraud, and risk analysis. Megan works as a Human Resource Partner at Zions Bancorporation where she supports Risk and Corporate Credit. She is an experienced Assistant Vice President skilled in relationship management, employee relations, and leadership development. Tabitha has worked for Zions Bank for the last decade and serves as a Vice President of Business Development in their Private Banking Department. She is responsible for gathering data to be used in the selling process, participating in community organizations and activities, and assisting clients in exploring investment & banking options.
Managing Stress and Anxiety
Workshop/Training
CAPS Workshops are free and open to USU Students, Faculty, and Staff. Workshops will be held virtually. Contact the CAPS Office at capsinfo@usu.edu to request the Zoom link.
African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection
Exhibition
"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.
Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction
Exhibition
During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.
The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope
Exhibition
Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.
"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.
Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.
PoBev in the Dark (Poetry and a Beverage)
Arts/Entertainment
Poetry and a Beverage broadcast. Tune in on our YouTube channel!
https://www.youtube.com/user/UtahStateSA
Gallery East - Nursing Department's 50th Anniversary Exhibit
Arts/Entertainment
September 23 – October 9 Reception, September 23, 6-8 PM, just outside of the gallery.
Flu Shot Clinic
Student Activities
This year, clinic will be staged in 2 outdoor locations (nursing students will also come to faculty/staff office locations). Please note we will be taking COVID-19 precautions.
@ the Eagles’ Nest or Public Drive-through @ BDAC
- Face Coverings Required
- Physical distancing will be practiced
FREE for the First 200 Students!
-A# needed
Place's and Faces of Utah's Coal Country
Arts/Entertainment
Noel A. Carmack is associate professor of art at USU Eastern. He received a BFA in illustration and MFA in drawing/painting from USU. About the work in this exhibition he says: Many of the coal mines, tipples, and powerhouse stacks in Utah are beginning to disappear, due to the decline of petroleum-based energy industries. The boom-and-bust economy of southeastern Utah is turning toward more favorable efficient energy sources, so the life and traditions of the men and women who are dependent on these industries are changing. These painings and drawings represent the deteriorating structures, the weathering marks left on the landscape, and the faces of the people who live and work in the area. The work is comprised of the following: 1) industrial landscapes, featuring the machinery, structures, and tools which have been used to mine or extract the natural resources of this area, and 2) portraits of the men and women whose lives are closely tied to eastern/southeastern Utah region.
Faith Challenges Support Group
Workshop/Training
This group is an opportunity for students to get together in a safe environment, learn from, and support each other. Each week, we will discuss pertinent issues related to faith that create stress (e.g., having faith doubts or internal conflict with elements of your faith, clarifying your spiritual identity, stresses associated with faith transitions, finding a spiritual place of belonging, talking to those of different faiths, etc.). The topic of the day will be motivated by those who participate that day. This group will be facilitated by Monique Frazier, a psychologist from USU Counseling and Psychological Services (CAPS).
Please contact CAPS to sign a service agreement and get the Zoom link.
Faculty Senate Meeting
Meeting
Monthly Meeting of the Faculty Senate
Geosciences Seminar Speaker Series: Dr. Jenny Suckale
Conference/Seminar
CIG Distinguished Speaker ~ Asst. Prof. Jenny Suckale, Stanford University
"To slide or to flow: Studying extremes in different natural systems sheds light on common physical processes"
Entrepreneurship Club $100 Startup Pitch Competition
Social/Networking
What: Students and club members pitch their business ideas for a chance to win $100 to help startup their business
Who: E-Club members and community
When: Monday @5:00 p.m.
Where: Huntsman Hall 320 or Huntsman School of Business courtyard
Why: Win $100 to help out your business in any way
How: come compete and pitch your business to a panel of judges! there will be money and prizes granted if you win
SHRM MAT Prep Event
Workshop/Training
USU’s Society of Human Resource Management (SHRM) Club invites you to its MAT Prep Event. Join us as we have MHR students explain the tips, tricks, and techniques they used to pass the MAT. As well, there will be a short mock test and question review to help you acclimate to the test environment, and help you do your best on the MAT.
Gallery East - Nursing Department's 50th Anniversary Exhibit
Arts/Entertainment
September 23 – October 9 Reception, September 23, 6-8 PM, just outside of the gallery.
Place's and Faces of Utah's Coal Country
Arts/Entertainment
Noel A. Carmack is associate professor of art at USU Eastern. He received a BFA in illustration and MFA in drawing/painting from USU. About the work in this exhibition he says: Many of the coal mines, tipples, and powerhouse stacks in Utah are beginning to disappear, due to the decline of petroleum-based energy industries. The boom-and-bust economy of southeastern Utah is turning toward more favorable efficient energy sources, so the life and traditions of the men and women who are dependent on these industries are changing. These painings and drawings represent the deteriorating structures, the weathering marks left on the landscape, and the faces of the people who live and work in the area. The work is comprised of the following: 1) industrial landscapes, featuring the machinery, structures, and tools which have been used to mine or extract the natural resources of this area, and 2) portraits of the men and women whose lives are closely tied to eastern/southeastern Utah region.
Flu Shot Clinic
Student Activities
This year, clinic will be staged in 2 outdoor locations (nursing students will also come to faculty/staff office locations). Please note we will be taking COVID-19 precautions.
@ the Eagles’ Nest or Public Drive-through @ BDAC
- Face Coverings Required
- Physical distancing will be practiced
FREE for the First 200 Students!
-A# needed
CIDI Workshop - Use Online Learning to Create Meaningful Class Time
Workshop/Training
A review of tips and techniques for helping students access content outside of class to free class-time for greater student engagement. Also applies to blended learning.
The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope
Exhibition
Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.
"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.
Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.
African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection
Exhibition
"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.
Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction
Exhibition
During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.
Evidence-Based Learning Circle
Workshop/Training
Understanding by Design Meets Neuroscience
by Jay McTighe and Judy Willis
Virtual Career and Internship Fair
Special Event
Register for the fair and signup for 1:1 and group meetings with over 35 employers:
As you prepare for the fair, it’s important that you register for employer sessions in advance. You can only attend sessions you registered for.
CIDI Workshop - Building Interactive Learning Activities with Atomic Assessments
Workshop/Training
Atomic Assessments provide 65 question types with multiple delivery and feedback options. They can be embedded nearly anywhere in Canvas, for practice or for points. Options abound for math and science. See how to create the interactive lessons you've longed to provide your students.
CIDI Workshop - Running Secure Exams in Canvas
Workshop/Training
This workshop addresses how to create exams in Canvas, plus tools and methods for protecting quiz content and ensuring academic integrity when in-person proctoring isn't an option. (Includes discussion of Proctorio, question banks, time limits, question design, and more.)
Biology Seminar Speaker Series: Dr. Terry Dial
Conference/Seminar
Dr. Terry Dial from Utah State University--Moab will present a talk on "Examining the Impact of Neuroimmune Dysregulation on Social Behavior in Male and Female Juvenile Rats" virtually on Zoom. Join Seminar: https://usu-edu.zoom.us/j/96328887734?pwd=Q0RLY2cvSVF2UTEzNytaai9HS25ZZz09
CHaSS Pre-Law Series: Mat Roundy (Poli Sci '16), Clerk, Utah's First Judicial Court
Special Event
On Tuesday, October 6 the CHaSS Pre-Law Alumni Series will focus on Lessons from Law School. Please join us for a conversation on Zoom with Mat Roundy, a judicial clerk for the First Judicial District of Utah. Mat majored in Political Science at Utah State University before going on to the University of Oregon School of Law. Mat’s interest in the legal field began as an undergraduate who participated in IOGP’s internship program. He has since clerked for the Civil Litigation Division of the Oregon Department of Justice and served as an extern for the Honorable Ann Aiken of the United States District Court for the District of Oregon.
Join us as we explore various opportunities and aspects of the legal profession. All USU students, faculty, and staff are welcome!
Interested attendees can register now and ask questions during the live Q&A!
Utah State Theatre: The Wolves
Arts/Entertainment
Left quad. Right quad. Lunge. A girls indoor soccer team warms up. From the safety of their suburban stretch circle, the team navigates big questions and wages tiny battles with all the vim and vigor of a pack of adolescent warriors. A portrait of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness for nine American girls who just want to score some goals.
Open to students, faculty, and staff with USU ID. Students free, faculty/staff $10. No day-of-show ticket sales or online sales. CCA Box Office Monday - Friday, 2 - 5 p.m. L101, Chase Fine Arts Center, USU Campus 435-797-8022. After hours, tickets can be purchased at the USU Ticket Office in the Dee Glenn Smith Spectrum or by calling 435-797-0305. Open Monday - Friday, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Executive Challenge Registration Deadline
Date/Deadline
The Executive Challenge is a one of a kind, fast-paced, multi-round simulation where 16 teams face off in an immersive leadership development experience. Assemble a team, network with c-level executives, and put your leadership skills to the test with the chance to win up to $2000.
Gallery East - Nursing Department's 50th Anniversary Exhibit
Arts/Entertainment
September 23 – October 9 Reception, September 23, 6-8 PM, just outside of the gallery.
Place's and Faces of Utah's Coal Country
Arts/Entertainment
Noel A. Carmack is associate professor of art at USU Eastern. He received a BFA in illustration and MFA in drawing/painting from USU. About the work in this exhibition he says: Many of the coal mines, tipples, and powerhouse stacks in Utah are beginning to disappear, due to the decline of petroleum-based energy industries. The boom-and-bust economy of southeastern Utah is turning toward more favorable efficient energy sources, so the life and traditions of the men and women who are dependent on these industries are changing. These painings and drawings represent the deteriorating structures, the weathering marks left on the landscape, and the faces of the people who live and work in the area. The work is comprised of the following: 1) industrial landscapes, featuring the machinery, structures, and tools which have been used to mine or extract the natural resources of this area, and 2) portraits of the men and women whose lives are closely tied to eastern/southeastern Utah region.
The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope
Exhibition
Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.
"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.
Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.
Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction
Exhibition
During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.
African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection
Exhibition
"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.
Cook Martin Poulson Tax Openhouse
Social/Networking
Tax students - join the professionals at Cook Martin Poulson for a BBQ open house. RSVP to mwalker@cookmartin.com
Opening Social - Metal Factory & Idea Factory
Student Activities
Take a tour of the Metal and Idea factories, see what projects you can create in each, and eat Crumbl Cookies!
Idea Factory: Room 110 Sant Engineering Innovations Bldg < https://ideafactory.usu.edu >
Metal Factory: West Bay Doors of the Technology Bldg < https://metalfactory.usu.edu >
Thinking Straight: How to Manage Your Thoughts for Maximum Mental Health
Workshop/Training
CAPS Workshops are free and open to USU Students, Faculty, and Staff. Workshops will be held virtually. Contact the CAPS Office at capsinfo@usu.edu to request the Zoom link.
PwC Inclusion Leadership Session
Information/Orientation
Join us as we discuss how PwC creates trust and transparency for our professionals when it comes to Diversity a& Inclusion. Please RSVP here to attend.
SARS-CoV-2 Emergence and the Race to Identify Treatments and Vaccines for Prevention of COVID-19
Lecture/Readings
USU's Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry hosts speaker Bart Tarbet, research associate professor in the USU Department of Animal, Dairy and Veterinary Sciences, who presents "SARS-CoV2 Emergence and the Race to Identify Treatments and Vaccines for Prevention of COVID-19." Dr. Tarbet's talk is presented via Zoom, Meeting ID: 991 3991 8394, Passcode: 4W3tYY. All are welcome.
CCA's Midweek Music Series: Aggie Music Project Goes Piano-less
Arts/Entertainment
USU Music faculty Jon Gudmudson (baritone saxophone), Max Matzen (trumpet), Braun Khan (bass), and Jason Nicholson (drums), celebrate the music of the Gerry Mulligan Quartet with Chet Baker this Wednesday under the tent.
One of the more influential small groups in jazz history was the so-called "pianoless" quartet of Gerry Mulligan, Chet Baker, Carson Smith, and Chico Hamilton. This seminal group took the musical world by storm in the early 1950s and defined a new sound and aesthetic dubbed West Coast jazz. Aggie Music Project will perform a number of the band's hits, including "Bernie's Tune," "Lullaby of the Leaves," "Line for Lyons" and many more. Bring a blanket or camp chair to the Engineering Quad, dress for the weather, and enjoy the cool sounds of West Coast jazz.
Utah State Theatre: The Wolves
Arts/Entertainment
Left quad. Right quad. Lunge. A girls indoor soccer team warms up. From the safety of their suburban stretch circle, the team navigates big questions and wages tiny battles with all the vim and vigor of a pack of adolescent warriors. A portrait of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness for nine American girls who just want to score some goals.
Open to students, faculty, and staff with USU ID. Students free, faculty/staff $10. No day-of-show ticket sales or online sales. CCA Box Office Monday - Friday, 2 - 5 p.m. L101, Chase Fine Arts Center, USU Campus 435-797-8022. After hours, tickets can be purchased at the USU Ticket Office in the Dee Glenn Smith Spectrum or by calling 435-797-0305. Open Monday - Friday, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Student Night with Theatre: Clue
Student Activities
Students are allowed to come to the play for free with their student ID. You do have to only sit with family or roommates and you do have to wear a mask.
Doors open at 6pm, you will be shown where to sit. The play starts at 7:30pm.
Clue On Stage
Arts/Entertainment
USU Eastern Theatre Production, directed by Dr. Corey Ewan
"A hilarious farce meets murder mystery."
Tickets are available at the door on the night of the event or you can pre-purchase tickets online at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/clue-on-stage-tickets-122834103109.
All CDC and USU recommendations will be enforced for audience safety.
A Day of Giving
Special Event
Twenty-four hours to give to cause that will help our Aggie community.
Place's and Faces of Utah's Coal Country
Arts/Entertainment
Noel A. Carmack is associate professor of art at USU Eastern. He received a BFA in illustration and MFA in drawing/painting from USU. About the work in this exhibition he says: Many of the coal mines, tipples, and powerhouse stacks in Utah are beginning to disappear, due to the decline of petroleum-based energy industries. The boom-and-bust economy of southeastern Utah is turning toward more favorable efficient energy sources, so the life and traditions of the men and women who are dependent on these industries are changing. These painings and drawings represent the deteriorating structures, the weathering marks left on the landscape, and the faces of the people who live and work in the area. The work is comprised of the following: 1) industrial landscapes, featuring the machinery, structures, and tools which have been used to mine or extract the natural resources of this area, and 2) portraits of the men and women whose lives are closely tied to eastern/southeastern Utah region.
Gallery East - Nursing Department's 50th Anniversary Exhibit
Arts/Entertainment
September 23 – October 9 Reception, September 23, 6-8 PM, just outside of the gallery.
The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope
Exhibition
Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.
"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.
Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.
African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection
Exhibition
"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.
Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction
Exhibition
During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.
Graduate Student LGBTQ+ Support Group
Workshop/Training
This group is an opportunity for LGBTQA students to get together, learn from, and support each other. Each week, we will discuss pertinent issues (i.e. coming out to parents, the challenges of balancing academics and dating, relationship challenges, self-acceptance, advocate burn out, etc.). The topic of the day will be motivated by those who participate that day. This group will be co-facilitated by a psychologist from USU Counseling and Psychological Services (CAPS) and a staff from the USU Inclusion Center.
Contact CAPS to sign a service agreement and receive the Zoom link.
Voting Rights 1870, 1920, 1965, 2020 Symposium - Dr. Mona Siegel
Conference/Seminar | Year of the Woman
Dr. Mona Siegel (Sacramento State University)
"Making the World Safe for Democracy: The Global Battle for Women's Suffrage after the First World War"
Moderated by Dr. Susan R. Grayzel
Succulent Night
Student Activities
Come plant a succulent in a pot and decorate the pot you want. It will be Thursday, October 8, 2020, from 6pm-8pm in the MPR. Please wear your mask!
Opportunities in Nuclear
Conference/Seminar
Come learn about potential internships, scholarships, and career opportunities within the nuclear industry.
BAP Opening Social
Social/Networking
Come enjoy a treat and learn more about Beta Alpha Psi and the opportunities this organization offers. RSVP here to attend.
Clue On Stage
Arts/Entertainment
USU Eastern Theatre Production, directed by Dr. Corey Ewan
"A hilarious farce meets murder mystery."
Tickets are available at the door on the night of the event or you can pre-purchase tickets online at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/clue-on-stage-tickets-122834103109.
All CDC and USU recommendations will be enforced for audience safety.
Utah State Theatre: The Wolves
Arts/Entertainment
Left quad. Right quad. Lunge. A girls indoor soccer team warms up. From the safety of their suburban stretch circle, the team navigates big questions and wages tiny battles with all the vim and vigor of a pack of adolescent warriors. A portrait of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness for nine American girls who just want to score some goals.
Open to students, faculty, and staff with USU ID. Students free, faculty/staff $10. No day-of-show ticket sales or online sales. CCA Box Office Monday - Friday, 2 - 5 p.m. L101, Chase Fine Arts Center, USU Campus 435-797-8022. After hours, tickets can be purchased at the USU Ticket Office in the Dee Glenn Smith Spectrum or by calling 435-797-0305. Open Monday - Friday, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Women in the Money: Utah Financial Empowerment Conference
Conference/Seminar
Women in the Money: Utah Financial Empowerment Conference is hosted by the Utah State Treasurer as an initiative of the Utah Financial Empowerment Coalition. The conference aims to empower Utah women to achieve financial security by providing access to crucial financial information, valuable resources, and new mentors and friends.
The conference serves Utah women from various walks of life. Women of all ages, cultures, and financial situations are invited to exchange ideas and grow together. The overarching message is that it is never too late, or too early, to learn about finances.
Place's and Faces of Utah's Coal Country
Arts/Entertainment
Noel A. Carmack is associate professor of art at USU Eastern. He received a BFA in illustration and MFA in drawing/painting from USU. About the work in this exhibition he says: Many of the coal mines, tipples, and powerhouse stacks in Utah are beginning to disappear, due to the decline of petroleum-based energy industries. The boom-and-bust economy of southeastern Utah is turning toward more favorable efficient energy sources, so the life and traditions of the men and women who are dependent on these industries are changing. These painings and drawings represent the deteriorating structures, the weathering marks left on the landscape, and the faces of the people who live and work in the area. The work is comprised of the following: 1) industrial landscapes, featuring the machinery, structures, and tools which have been used to mine or extract the natural resources of this area, and 2) portraits of the men and women whose lives are closely tied to eastern/southeastern Utah region.
Goldman Sachs Virtual Salt Lake City Summit Fall 2020
Social/Networking | Career Exploration Trips
To be considered for this event on October 9, 2020, complete this registration form by October 4, 2020
Goldman Sachs is hosting students interested in our 2021 Salt Lake City Summer Analyst opportunities for a one-day summit. This event will provide you with the opportunity to learn more about careers within Goldman Sachs, network with Goldman employees and discover what it is like to live in Salt Lake City.
The following events will take place via Zoom throughout the day. We invite you to attend the session(s) that interest you most:
Virtual Office Tour - 9:00am MT
SLC Lifestyle Panel - 11:00am MT
GS SLC Culture Session - 1:00pm MT
Small Group Alumni Networking - 3:00pm MT
Gallery East - Nursing Department's 50th Anniversary Exhibit
Arts/Entertainment
September 23 – October 9 Reception, September 23, 6-8 PM, just outside of the gallery.
Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction
Exhibition
During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.
African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection
Exhibition
"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.
The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope
Exhibition
Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.
"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.
Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.
Leadership Forum: Kurt Larsen, Resource Management
Panel Discussion/Presentation | Focused Friday
Hear from Kurt Larsen, recipient of his year’s Distinguished Executive Alumnus Award. An Aggie, Larsen founded Resource Management Inc. (RMI) in 1992 to help small business owners focus more directly on the production side of their company by outsourcing to RMI their administrative, payroll, benefits, human resources, and risk management functions. Under Mr. Larsen’s leadership, Resource Management has grown to represent more than 10,000 employees in 46 states and has gross revenues of $350 million per year.
Limited in-person seating is available, register here to attend in-person.
The presentation will be live-streamed on the Huntsman YouTube Channel.
Speaker Series: Shannon Ellsworth
Panel Discussion/Presentation
Join us for the the LAEP Speaker Series! On select Fridays throughout the semester, guest speakers from varying backgrounds share their experience and expertise, followed by a Q&A with students. We're excited to welcome LAEP alumna Shannon Ellsworth back to campus to give her lecture titled "Planning for Public Lands."
Ellsworth graduated from Utah State University with a Bachelor of Landscape Architecture degree in 2013. She continued her education at Brigham Young University, where she earned a Master of Business Administration. Her career has focused on government relations and environmental planning. She is currently Community Development Manager at Sunrise Engineering in Springville, Utah.
Applied Mathematics Seminar
Conference/Seminar
Title: Integrating genetic and environmental data to model and forecast movement and habitat use in the major insect vector of sleeping sickness in Uganda (Glossina fuscipes fuscipes).
Speaker: Norah Saarman, Biology Department, USU
ZOOM ID: 945 1753 3441 PWD: USUAMS
Abstract: Tsetse flies (genus Glossina) are the obligate vectors of the trypanosome parasite that cause animal nagana and human sleeping sickness. One of the most effective strategies in controlling these dangerous and costly diseases is through vector control. Establishing feasible programs that reduce on-the-ground disease risk require knowledge of vector movement and habitat use. We use a novel machine learning strategy based on genetic data, field records, and remotely-sensed environmental data to model and predict both vector movement and habitat use across the landscape.
Clue On Stage
Arts/Entertainment
USU Eastern Theatre Production, directed by Dr. Corey Ewan
"A hilarious farce meets murder mystery."
Tickets are available at the door on the night of the event or you can pre-purchase tickets online at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/clue-on-stage-tickets-122834103109.
All CDC and USU recommendations will be enforced for audience safety.
Utah State Theatre: The Wolves
Arts/Entertainment
Left quad. Right quad. Lunge. A girls indoor soccer team warms up. From the safety of their suburban stretch circle, the team navigates big questions and wages tiny battles with all the vim and vigor of a pack of adolescent warriors. A portrait of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness for nine American girls who just want to score some goals.
Open to students, faculty, and staff with USU ID. Students free, faculty/staff $10. No day-of-show ticket sales or online sales. CCA Box Office Monday - Friday, 2 - 5 p.m. L101, Chase Fine Arts Center, USU Campus 435-797-8022. After hours, tickets can be purchased at the USU Ticket Office in the Dee Glenn Smith Spectrum or by calling 435-797-0305. Open Monday - Friday, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.
The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope
Exhibition
Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.
"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.
Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.
Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction
Exhibition
During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.
African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection
Exhibition
"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.
Utah State Theatre: The Wolves
Arts/Entertainment
Left quad. Right quad. Lunge. A girls indoor soccer team warms up. From the safety of their suburban stretch circle, the team navigates big questions and wages tiny battles with all the vim and vigor of a pack of adolescent warriors. A portrait of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness for nine American girls who just want to score some goals.
Open to students, faculty, and staff with USU ID. Students free, faculty/staff $8. No day-of-show ticket sales or online sales. CCA Box Office Monday - Friday, 2 - 5 p.m. L101, Chase Fine Arts Center, USU Campus 435-797-8022. After hours, tickets can be purchased at the USU Ticket Office in the Dee Glenn Smith Spectrum or by calling 435-797-0305. Open Monday - Friday, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Utah State Theatre: The Wolves
Arts/Entertainment
Left quad. Right quad. Lunge. A girls indoor soccer team warms up. From the safety of their suburban stretch circle, the team navigates big questions and wages tiny battles with all the vim and vigor of a pack of adolescent warriors. A portrait of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness for nine American girls who just want to score some goals.
Open to students, faculty, and staff with USU ID. Students free, faculty/staff $10. No day-of-show ticket sales or online sales. CCA Box Office Monday - Friday, 2 - 5 p.m. L101, Chase Fine Arts Center, USU Campus 435-797-8022. After hours, tickets can be purchased at the USU Ticket Office in the Dee Glenn Smith Spectrum or by calling 435-797-0305. Open Monday - Friday, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Virtual Chocolate Expo
Exhibition
During the week of October 12 the Aggie Chocolate Factory will have a virtual event where people can learn fun facts about chocolate. There is also a Chocolate Creation competition with lots of prizes
Place's and Faces of Utah's Coal Country
Arts/Entertainment
Noel A. Carmack is associate professor of art at USU Eastern. He received a BFA in illustration and MFA in drawing/painting from USU. About the work in this exhibition he says: Many of the coal mines, tipples, and powerhouse stacks in Utah are beginning to disappear, due to the decline of petroleum-based energy industries. The boom-and-bust economy of southeastern Utah is turning toward more favorable efficient energy sources, so the life and traditions of the men and women who are dependent on these industries are changing. These painings and drawings represent the deteriorating structures, the weathering marks left on the landscape, and the faces of the people who live and work in the area. The work is comprised of the following: 1) industrial landscapes, featuring the machinery, structures, and tools which have been used to mine or extract the natural resources of this area, and 2) portraits of the men and women whose lives are closely tied to eastern/southeastern Utah region.
Little Naturalist FaceBook Live Reading
Lecture/Readings
Join us on Facebook live for a nature-themed story time. After each reading, instructions for a simple craft or activity that can be completed in your own home will be available to continue your child’s learning!
Today we will be reading Leaf Man by Louis Ehlert.
Leadership Week: "Taco" bout Leadership
Student Activities
Enjoy free tacos from Pollo Azteca after completing simple acts of kindness.
Faith Challenges Support Group
Workshop/Training
This group is an opportunity for students to get together in a safe environment, learn from, and support each other. Each week, we will discuss pertinent issues related to faith that create stress (e.g., having faith doubts or internal conflict with elements of your faith, clarifying your spiritual identity, stresses associated with faith transitions, finding a spiritual place of belonging, talking to those of different faiths, etc.). The topic of the day will be motivated by those who participate that day. This group will be facilitated by Monique Frazier, a psychologist from USU Counseling and Psychological Services (CAPS).
Please contact CAPS to sign a service agreement and get the Zoom link.
Guest speaker David Finnegan (Entrepreneur and World Class Marketer)
Social/Networking
What: Guest speaker David Finnegan
Who: Community and E-Club members
When: Monday @5:00 PM Where: Huntsman Hall 322
Why: Learn from an experienced business owner on what it's like to own/start a business
Telling Our Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women
Exhibition
Merrill-Cazier Library joins the Year of the Woman celebration with the exhibit "Telling Out Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women." The exhibit is on display from October 1-November 23 in the Library Atrium. It can also be viewed digitally at http://exhibits.usu.edu/exhibits/show/tellingourstory.
Virtual Chocolate Expo
Exhibition
During the week of October 12 the Aggie Chocolate Factory will have a virtual event where people can learn fun facts about chocolate. There is also a Chocolate Creation competition with lots of prizes
Place's and Faces of Utah's Coal Country
Arts/Entertainment
Noel A. Carmack is associate professor of art at USU Eastern. He received a BFA in illustration and MFA in drawing/painting from USU. About the work in this exhibition he says: Many of the coal mines, tipples, and powerhouse stacks in Utah are beginning to disappear, due to the decline of petroleum-based energy industries. The boom-and-bust economy of southeastern Utah is turning toward more favorable efficient energy sources, so the life and traditions of the men and women who are dependent on these industries are changing. These painings and drawings represent the deteriorating structures, the weathering marks left on the landscape, and the faces of the people who live and work in the area. The work is comprised of the following: 1) industrial landscapes, featuring the machinery, structures, and tools which have been used to mine or extract the natural resources of this area, and 2) portraits of the men and women whose lives are closely tied to eastern/southeastern Utah region.
CIDI Workshop - Getting Started With Zoom
Workshop/Training
Learn the basics of Zoom, including scheduling, recording, managing settings, and making a good learning environment for your students.
The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope
Exhibition
Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.
"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.
Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.
African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection
Exhibition
"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.
Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction
Exhibition
During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.
Creating Engaging Student Events in A Virtual World
Conference/Seminar
Alina Begay, Program Coordinator, Indigenous Student Programs
Nathan Laursen, USUSA Program Coordinator, Student Involvement & Leadership Ctr
Paige Eidenschink, Fraternity & Sorority Life Coordinator, Student Involvement & Leadership Ctr
Utah Women in 2020: Challenges, Opportunities, and Next Steps
Panel Discussion/Presentation
For decades, Utah has been behind the nation in women’s economic empowerment, professional achievement, political representation, and the presence of women in leadership in all sectors. Yet we have been near the top of the nation’s rankings in areas like domestic violence, sexual assault, and cosmetic surgery. The Utah Women & Leadership Project, Salt Lake Tribune, and YWCA Utah have collected data that show where Utah women have ranked in the past and documents women’s own perceptions and experiences as well. This engaging panel discussion will unpack current research findings and focus on top-of-mind issues for Utah women in 2020: What are our most pressing challenges and promising opportunities? How is our rapidly changing world affecting women and girls in the state? And finally, what might be the next steps to strengthen the impact of women in Utah in all sectors, including home, church, business, schools, universities, and beyond? Join us for a lively discussion with experts on Utah women’s issues to gain deeper insights into where we have been, where we are going, and how you can personally engage in this important work.
SAMPE Virtual Industry Tour with HyPerComp Engineering
Social/Networking
SAMPE is hosting a virtual industry tour with HyPerComp Engineering out of Brigham City, Utah. HyPerComp makes carbon fiber over-wrapped pressure vessels for Nasa, Lockheed Martin, US Navy, and more
Leadership Week: The Executive Challenge - Round 1
Special Event
The Executive Challenge is a one of a kind, fast-paced, multi-round simulation where 16 teams face off in an immersive leadership development experience. Assemble a team, network with c-level executives, and put your leadership skills to the test with the chance to win up to $2000.
Register at huntsman.usu.edu/leadership/executive-challenge by September 28, 2020 at 11:59 PM.
Biology Seminar Speaker Series: Dr. Laura Burkle
Conference/Seminar
Dr. Laura Burkle from Montana State University will present a talk on "Untangling Drivers of Variation in Plant-Pollinator Diversity" virtually on Zoom. Join Seminar: https://usu-edu.zoom.us/j/96328887734?pwd=Q0RLY2cvSVF2UTEzNytaai9HS25ZZz09
ASME Opening Social!
Social/Networking
Everyone is welcome to join us for our 2020 ASME Opening Zoom Social! There will be games, trivia, and LOTS of prizes, including free t-shirts and gift cards! It's also a rare opportunity to meet and make new engineering friends amid the chaos of COVID-19. Register through the link provided, or email asmeaggie@gmail.com to get the zoom link!
Telling Our Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women
Exhibition
Merrill-Cazier Library joins the Year of the Woman celebration with the exhibit "Telling Out Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women." The exhibit is on display from October 1-November 23 in the Library Atrium. It can also be viewed digitally at http://exhibits.usu.edu/exhibits/show/tellingourstory.
Virtual Chocolate Expo
Exhibition
During the week of October 12 the Aggie Chocolate Factory will have a virtual event where people can learn fun facts about chocolate. There is also a Chocolate Creation competition with lots of prizes
Place's and Faces of Utah's Coal Country
Arts/Entertainment
Noel A. Carmack is associate professor of art at USU Eastern. He received a BFA in illustration and MFA in drawing/painting from USU. About the work in this exhibition he says: Many of the coal mines, tipples, and powerhouse stacks in Utah are beginning to disappear, due to the decline of petroleum-based energy industries. The boom-and-bust economy of southeastern Utah is turning toward more favorable efficient energy sources, so the life and traditions of the men and women who are dependent on these industries are changing. These painings and drawings represent the deteriorating structures, the weathering marks left on the landscape, and the faces of the people who live and work in the area. The work is comprised of the following: 1) industrial landscapes, featuring the machinery, structures, and tools which have been used to mine or extract the natural resources of this area, and 2) portraits of the men and women whose lives are closely tied to eastern/southeastern Utah region.
Gallery East - "Continuum"
Arts/Entertainment
Charles Callis, “Continuum,” Paintings, October 14 – November 6
The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope
Exhibition
Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.
"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.
Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.
Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction
Exhibition
During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.
African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection
Exhibition
"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.
CIDI Workshop - Creating Inclusive, Accessible Documents
Workshop/Training
Creating accessible content is more important than ever before and there are easy things that you can do as you create your content to make sure they are inclusive for all students in your classroom, including students with disabilities. In this workshop we will go over:
- Accessibility basics and helpful tools in Canvas.
- Creating accessible Word, PowerPoint and PDF documents.
- Resources available to help do some accessibility work for you.
Uintah Basin Aggie Blueprint
Information/Orientation
No matter where you are in your college journey, get help from your personal USU success team.
Take the next step towards a rewarding career by investing in you and your education.
Join us to learn about all the tools to help you succeed while earning your Utah State degree in the Uintah Basin. A variety of topics will be covered, personalized to your unique needs. Each session will be customized to address questions from people attending.
Potential topics include:
Admissions application process
Scholarships
Financial aid
Transferring credits
Student support resources
Majors and programs
Please register at: uintahbasin.usu.edu/blueprint
MBA Virtual Information Session
Information/Orientation | Student Recruiting
This virtual information session is available to anyone interested in either pursuing an MBA or learning what an MBA could do for you. The session will cover frequently asked questions and will have a live Q&A panel made up of an MBA alum, MBA student, and the MBA team to answer any additional questions you may have. Please RSVP here to attend.
Around the World Wednesdays: Africa
Special Event
The College of Humanities and Social Sciences (CHaSS) is teaming up with the Institute of Government and Politics to bring you Around the World Wednesdays –a series of conversations with Utah State University alumni working internationally.
Join us each month as we virtually visit a different region to learn the ins and outs of finding opportunities abroad, navigating a new culture, and exploring professional environments beyond our borders.
On Wednesday, October 14th, our panel will discuss working in the Africa. Ann Norman (History '99), General Manager for Sub-Saharan Africa at Pioneer Energy, and Gabrielle Gay (Economics ’07), Chief Operating Officer of Ensign College in Ghana, will share their experiences helping to meet the energy and healthcare needs of African countries.
Co-host Dr. Shannon Peterson is also available to share opportunities for current USU students interested in interning abroad.
Join the conversation on Zoom at 12:30pm MST: https://usu-edu.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_lWy0BhZWTcWgly569oyyKA
Leadership Week: Pencils for Pizza
Student Activities
Bring school supplies to help us assemble education kits and earn free pizza.
Accepted donations:
- New Notebook
- New Eraser
- New Pencils
- New Pencil Sharpener
- New Child Scissors
- New Box crayons or colored pencils
Sunset Yoga
Student Activities
There will be a yoga instructor coming to teach the students yoga during the sunset. It will be on the fountain field from 5:30pm-6:45pm. Please wear a mask and you will be social distancing.
FPA Meeting: Building a Financial Plan
Panel Discussion/Presentation
The Financial Planning Association will be meeting with a local financial planner to talk about the process of building out a financial plan and recommendations.
Midweek Movie - The Addams Family
Student Activities
Come see movies on the big screen, the way they were intended! Movies begin at 6:30 p.m. in the Geary Event Center. Entrance is only $1.
CCA's Midweek Music Series: Music Theater Cabaret
Arts/Entertainment
USU voice students involved with the USU Opera Theatre are thrilled to present an evening of beloved contemporary musical theatre solos, duets, and trios. Featuring favorites from Sweeney Todd, Waitress, The Little Mermaid, Hamilton, Addams Family, and more, we are sure to brighten up your day. Dress warmly, drop in, and enjoy!
USU Big Bands
Arts/Entertainment
Join USU's two big bands as we celebrate saxophonist, composer and arranger Bob Mintzer. The USU Jazz Orchestra, under the direction of Jon Gudmundson, will present a Mintzer Sandwich, so to speak, with a set of three of Mintzer's most popular arrangements: "Computer," "Acha," and "Ellis Island," enveloped between two nutritious slices of Basie bread. The Basie bookends consist of the classics "Corner Pocket" and "Shiny Stockings."
The USU Jazz Ensemble, directed by Greg Wheeler, will likewise present a sandwich of big band masterworks guaranteed to set your toe to tapping and your head to bobbing.
Open to students, faculty, and staff with USU ID. Students free, faculty/staff $10. No day-of-show ticket sales or online sales. CCA Box Office Monday - Friday, 2 - 5 p.m. L101, Chase Fine Arts Center, USU Campus 435-797-8022. After hours, tickets can be purchased at the USU Ticket Office in the Dee Glenn Smith Spectrum or by calling 435-797-0305. Open Monday - Friday, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Telling Our Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women
Exhibition
Merrill-Cazier Library joins the Year of the Woman celebration with the exhibit "Telling Out Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women." The exhibit is on display from October 1-November 23 in the Library Atrium. It can also be viewed digitally at http://exhibits.usu.edu/exhibits/show/tellingourstory.
Virtual Chocolate Expo
Exhibition
During the week of October 12 the Aggie Chocolate Factory will have a virtual event where people can learn fun facts about chocolate. There is also a Chocolate Creation competition with lots of prizes
Gallery East - "Continuum"
Arts/Entertainment
Charles Callis, “Continuum,” Paintings, October 14 – November 6
Place's and Faces of Utah's Coal Country
Arts/Entertainment
Noel A. Carmack is associate professor of art at USU Eastern. He received a BFA in illustration and MFA in drawing/painting from USU. About the work in this exhibition he says: Many of the coal mines, tipples, and powerhouse stacks in Utah are beginning to disappear, due to the decline of petroleum-based energy industries. The boom-and-bust economy of southeastern Utah is turning toward more favorable efficient energy sources, so the life and traditions of the men and women who are dependent on these industries are changing. These painings and drawings represent the deteriorating structures, the weathering marks left on the landscape, and the faces of the people who live and work in the area. The work is comprised of the following: 1) industrial landscapes, featuring the machinery, structures, and tools which have been used to mine or extract the natural resources of this area, and 2) portraits of the men and women whose lives are closely tied to eastern/southeastern Utah region.
The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope
Exhibition
Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.
"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.
Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.
African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection
Exhibition
"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.
Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction
Exhibition
During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.
CIDI Workshop - Recording Your Lectures
Workshop/Training
This workshop will focus on utilizing lecture capture in your course.
Chocolate Creation Competition
Special Event
October 15 is the deadline to submit your Chocolate Creation Product for the Competition hosted by the Aggie Chocolate Factory. More information can be found at: https://aggiechocolatestore.com/expo/
Don't miss this opportunity to win a lot of prizes!
Graduate Student LGBTQ+ Support Group
Workshop/Training
This group is an opportunity for LGBTQA students to get together, learn from, and support each other. Each week, we will discuss pertinent issues (i.e. coming out to parents, the challenges of balancing academics and dating, relationship challenges, self-acceptance, advocate burn out, etc.). The topic of the day will be motivated by those who participate that day. This group will be co-facilitated by a psychologist from USU Counseling and Psychological Services (CAPS) and a staff from the USU Inclusion Center.
Contact CAPS to sign a service agreement and receive the Zoom link.
Coming Out and Crafting
Student Activities
Stop by the QRC to pick up a cross stitching kit or use your own craft supplies and join us on Zoom to talk about the ins and outs of coming out.
Zoom ID: 952 7223 8808
Math and Stats Colloquium
Conference/Seminar
Please, join us for this for this week's departmental colloquium.
Title: Creating a Unified Set of Roof Snow Load Creating a Unified Set of Roof Snow Load
Requirements for the United States Requirements for the United States
Speaker: Brennan Bean, Assistant Professor
Open this link for info on how to attend:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Cza5YU6pMEHWKlbvTV4Y7Sn4n55naBBl/view?usp=sharing
A Philosophy Club Talk by Larry Udell, "Some Rawlsian Notes on Universal Basic Income"
Lecture/Readings
In this talk, Dr. Udell will discuss the merits and shortcomings of Universal Basic Income.
WIBA Pitch Perfect Workshop
Workshop/Training
Huntsman Corporate Sponsors and Recruiters will lead an exclusive Workshop to Perfect your Personal Pitch. Participating companies include CED, General Mills, Goldman Sachs, Paycom, and more. This is a great opportunity to meet recruiters, network, and work in small groups to hone your Personal Pitch. Practice makes Pitch Perfect! Register here to attend.
Voting Rights 1870, 1920, 1965, 2020 Symposium - Dr. Kimberly Jensen
Conference/Seminar | Year of the Woman
Dr. Kimberly Jensen (Western Oregon University)
"Registration, Education, and Voting: Black Women and Civic Organizating in Oregon, 1913-1916"
Moderated by Dr. Evelyn Funda
Phi Beta Lambda (PBL) Opening Social: Sugar Fest!
Social/Networking | Student Recruiting
Join us for Sugar Fest, Phi Beta Lambda's (PBL's) opening social! Come choose your competitive events and enjoy Halloween-themed episodes from your favorite sitcoms. Pie and ice cream will be provided!
Please RSVP to Jaren at (435) 553-5333 or Rachel at (801) 875-8374
USU Natural Resources Student Professional Networking
Social/Networking
Register for the event to receive instructions to connect at aggie.link/NR-network
Open to current students in Price and the Uintah Basin and individuals interested in pursuing a career in natural resources.
• Network with peers in the natural resources field.
• Discover career options available.
• Learn about research and internship opportunities with the Utah Department of Natural Resources, US Forest Service, Dinosaur National Monument, and Bureau of Land Management.
For more information, contact Mark Chynoweth at mark.chynoweth@usu.edu
USU Natural Resources Student Professional Networking
Social/Networking
Register for the event to receive instructions to connect at aggie.link/NR-network
Open to current students in Price and the Uintah Basin and individuals interested in pursuing a career in natural resources.
- Network with peers in the natural resources field.
- Discover career options available.
- Learn about research and internship opportunities with the Utah Department of Natural Resources, US Forest Service, Dinosaur National Monument, and Bureau of Land Management.
For more information, contact Mark Chynoweth at mark.chynoweth@usu.edu
Telling Our Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women
Exhibition
Merrill-Cazier Library joins the Year of the Woman celebration with the exhibit "Telling Out Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women." The exhibit is on display from October 1-November 23 in the Library Atrium. It can also be viewed digitally at http://exhibits.usu.edu/exhibits/show/tellingourstory.
Virtual Chocolate Expo
Exhibition
During the week of October 12 the Aggie Chocolate Factory will have a virtual event where people can learn fun facts about chocolate. There is also a Chocolate Creation competition with lots of prizes
Gallery East - "Continuum"
Arts/Entertainment
Charles Callis, “Continuum,” Paintings, October 14 – November 6
Place's and Faces of Utah's Coal Country
Arts/Entertainment
Noel A. Carmack is associate professor of art at USU Eastern. He received a BFA in illustration and MFA in drawing/painting from USU. About the work in this exhibition he says: Many of the coal mines, tipples, and powerhouse stacks in Utah are beginning to disappear, due to the decline of petroleum-based energy industries. The boom-and-bust economy of southeastern Utah is turning toward more favorable efficient energy sources, so the life and traditions of the men and women who are dependent on these industries are changing. These painings and drawings represent the deteriorating structures, the weathering marks left on the landscape, and the faces of the people who live and work in the area. The work is comprised of the following: 1) industrial landscapes, featuring the machinery, structures, and tools which have been used to mine or extract the natural resources of this area, and 2) portraits of the men and women whose lives are closely tied to eastern/southeastern Utah region.
Sun, Earth, Universe
Exhibition | Home, Family, and Food
Fridays - Sundays | 10 AM - 4 PM
FREE!
Swaner is pleased to offer the Sun, Earth, Universe exhibition in collaboration with NASA, the National Informal STEM Education Network (NISE Net) and NHMU! This is an interactive, English and Spanish bilingual exhibition about Earth and space science for families.
We explore questions about the Earth. How is Earth changing? We investigate questions about the solar system. What is it like on other planets? We consider questions about the universe. Are we alone?
Design, build, and test your own spacecraft to complete a NASA mission or put all your space mission-planning knowledge to the test by playing the Mission to Space board game. Will your mission be the first to be completed? What will you discover?
The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope
Exhibition
Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.
"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.
Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.
African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection
Exhibition
"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.
Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction
Exhibition
During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.
Leadership Week: The Diversity, Inclusion and Leadership Imperative
Panel Discussion/Presentation | Focused Friday
Join Lord Dr. Michael Hastings, Anne Chow, Boyd Craig, Sanda Ojiambo, and James Manyika as they discuss the importance of diversity, inclusion, and leadership in the workplace and our lives.
Panel moderator: Lord Dr. Michael Hastings
Panel members:
- Anne Chow, CEO, AT&T Business
- Boyd Craig, CEO, Leader.org
- Sanda Ojiambo, Executive Director, United Nations Global Compact
- James Manyika, Chairman, Director, and Senior Partner, McKinsey Global Institute
Please RSVP here to attend.
SIAM Northern States Section Student Chapters Conference
Conference/Seminar
This conference aims to foster connections among undergraduate and graduate students as well as faculty with broad interests in industrial and applied mathematics from the SIAM Northern States Section universities.
Activities will include poster sessions, oral talks, and plenary speakers. Students are encouraged to present their research. The conference will feature both synchronous and asynchronous activities.
To register or submit an abstract, or for more information about the conference, visit our website at math.usu.edu/siam/nss-sc. If you have any questions, please contact siam@usu.edu
HOWL Freaky Friday Drive-in-Movie
Arts/Entertainment
We will be showing Movies for students only as part of our annual HOWL Celebration.
Tickets are available at the TSC Card Office or Spectrum Ticket Office the week of the Movie.
The shows will be the following.
Oct 9th: The Sixth Sense
Oct 16th: Hocus Pocus
Oct 23rd: Scary Stories to Tell in The Dark
Oct 30th: Happy Death Day & Happy Death Day 2U (double feature)
Telling Our Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women
Exhibition
Merrill-Cazier Library joins the Year of the Woman celebration with the exhibit "Telling Out Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women." The exhibit is on display from October 1-November 23 in the Library Atrium. It can also be viewed digitally at http://exhibits.usu.edu/exhibits/show/tellingourstory.
8th Annual Lucid Programming Competition
Special Event
Join us for the 8th annual Lucid Programming Competition. Compete virtually against students from universities across the western US for a chance to win an Amazon gift card worth up to $350. It's always a good time—you won't want to miss it!
Sun, Earth, Universe
Exhibition | Home, Family, and Food
Fridays - Sundays | 10 AM - 4 PM
FREE!
Swaner is pleased to offer the Sun, Earth, Universe exhibition in collaboration with NASA, the National Informal STEM Education Network (NISE Net) and NHMU! This is an interactive, English and Spanish bilingual exhibition about Earth and space science for families.
We explore questions about the Earth. How is Earth changing? We investigate questions about the solar system. What is it like on other planets? We consider questions about the universe. Are we alone?
Design, build, and test your own spacecraft to complete a NASA mission or put all your space mission-planning knowledge to the test by playing the Mission to Space board game. Will your mission be the first to be completed? What will you discover?
African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection
Exhibition
"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.
Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction
Exhibition
During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.
The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope
Exhibition
Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.
"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.
Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.
Telling Our Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women
Exhibition
Merrill-Cazier Library joins the Year of the Woman celebration with the exhibit "Telling Out Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women." The exhibit is on display from October 1-November 23 in the Library Atrium. It can also be viewed digitally at http://exhibits.usu.edu/exhibits/show/tellingourstory.
Sun, Earth, Universe
Exhibition | Home, Family, and Food
Fridays - Sundays | 10 AM - 4 PM
FREE!
Swaner is pleased to offer the Sun, Earth, Universe exhibition in collaboration with NASA, the National Informal STEM Education Network (NISE Net) and NHMU! This is an interactive, English and Spanish bilingual exhibition about Earth and space science for families.
We explore questions about the Earth. How is Earth changing? We investigate questions about the solar system. What is it like on other planets? We consider questions about the universe. Are we alone?
Design, build, and test your own spacecraft to complete a NASA mission or put all your space mission-planning knowledge to the test by playing the Mission to Space board game. Will your mission be the first to be completed? What will you discover?
Telling Our Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women
Exhibition
Merrill-Cazier Library joins the Year of the Woman celebration with the exhibit "Telling Out Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women." The exhibit is on display from October 1-November 23 in the Library Atrium. It can also be viewed digitally at http://exhibits.usu.edu/exhibits/show/tellingourstory.
Place's and Faces of Utah's Coal Country
Arts/Entertainment
Noel A. Carmack is associate professor of art at USU Eastern. He received a BFA in illustration and MFA in drawing/painting from USU. About the work in this exhibition he says: Many of the coal mines, tipples, and powerhouse stacks in Utah are beginning to disappear, due to the decline of petroleum-based energy industries. The boom-and-bust economy of southeastern Utah is turning toward more favorable efficient energy sources, so the life and traditions of the men and women who are dependent on these industries are changing. These painings and drawings represent the deteriorating structures, the weathering marks left on the landscape, and the faces of the people who live and work in the area. The work is comprised of the following: 1) industrial landscapes, featuring the machinery, structures, and tools which have been used to mine or extract the natural resources of this area, and 2) portraits of the men and women whose lives are closely tied to eastern/southeastern Utah region.
Gallery East - "Continuum"
Arts/Entertainment
Charles Callis, “Continuum,” Paintings, October 14 – November 6
Faith Challenges Support Group
Workshop/Training
This group is an opportunity for students to get together in a safe environment, learn from, and support each other. Each week, we will discuss pertinent issues related to faith that create stress (e.g., having faith doubts or internal conflict with elements of your faith, clarifying your spiritual identity, stresses associated with faith transitions, finding a spiritual place of belonging, talking to those of different faiths, etc.). The topic of the day will be motivated by those who participate that day. This group will be facilitated by Monique Frazier, a psychologist from USU Counseling and Psychological Services (CAPS).
Please contact CAPS to sign a service agreement and get the Zoom link.
Faculty Senate Executive Committee Meeting
Meeting
Monthly meeting of the Faculty Senate Executive Committee
Geosciences Seminar Speaker
Conference/Seminar
"The March 31, 2020 Mw6.5 Stanley earthquake: seismotectonics and preliminary aftershock analysis”
with
Lee Liberty, Research Professor
Boise State University
https://www.boisestate.edu/earth/staff-members/lee-liberty/
Join via Zoom at https://usu-edu.zoom.us/j/86951957943?pwd=UDNyOWU5SjJ3ZEd1amtoRVhUay9SQT09
Guest Speaker Travis Kunz
Social/Networking
What: Guest speaker Travis Kunz
Who: Community and E-Club members
When: Monday @5:00 PM
Where: Huntsman Hall 322
Why: Learn from an experienced business owner on what it's like to own/start a business
Horror Movie in the Geary
Student Activities
Come watch a scary movie at the Geary Events Center
Telling Our Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women
Exhibition
Merrill-Cazier Library joins the Year of the Woman celebration with the exhibit "Telling Out Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women." The exhibit is on display from October 1-November 23 in the Library Atrium. It can also be viewed digitally at http://exhibits.usu.edu/exhibits/show/tellingourstory.
Second 7-week Session
Academic Calendar | Fall Semester
34 instruction days, 1 test day
Gallery East - "Continuum"
Arts/Entertainment
Charles Callis, “Continuum,” Paintings, October 14 – November 6
Place's and Faces of Utah's Coal Country
Arts/Entertainment
Noel A. Carmack is associate professor of art at USU Eastern. He received a BFA in illustration and MFA in drawing/painting from USU. About the work in this exhibition he says: Many of the coal mines, tipples, and powerhouse stacks in Utah are beginning to disappear, due to the decline of petroleum-based energy industries. The boom-and-bust economy of southeastern Utah is turning toward more favorable efficient energy sources, so the life and traditions of the men and women who are dependent on these industries are changing. These painings and drawings represent the deteriorating structures, the weathering marks left on the landscape, and the faces of the people who live and work in the area. The work is comprised of the following: 1) industrial landscapes, featuring the machinery, structures, and tools which have been used to mine or extract the natural resources of this area, and 2) portraits of the men and women whose lives are closely tied to eastern/southeastern Utah region.
CIDI Workshop - Modifying the Canvas Visual Template
Workshop/Training
Learn how to import, use and customize the newly-provided course visual template in Canvas.
The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope
Exhibition
Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.
"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.
Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.
Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction
Exhibition
During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.
African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection
Exhibition
"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.
Biology Seminar Speaker Series: Dr. Erin Hecht
Conference/Seminar
Dr. Erin Hecht from Harvard University will present a talk on "Brain-Behavior Evolution in Dogs and Foxes" virtually on Zoom. Join Seminar: https://usu-edu.zoom.us/j/96328887734?pwd=Q0RLY2cvSVF2UTEzNytaai9HS25ZZz09
Evening with Industry
Social/Networking
Evening with Industry is a networking event that provides students with the opportunity to meet with companies of their choice. During this time, students are able to speak to industry representatives. This is a network social event.
HR Leaders Lecture Series
Special Event
USU’s Society of Human Resource Management (SHRM) Club invites you to its HR Leaders Lecture Series. Every month, a distinguished HR leader will present to students about their specialized field. For students interested in HR, Leadership, or Management this is a lecture series you cannot afford to miss.
This month, Elisa Garn will be talking about Employer Branding and her experience in more than 15 years in HR. Elisa works in business development and recruiting primarily with small to mid-sized businesses. She is a member of the Forbes Human Resource Council, has served as the President for Salt Lake SHRM, co-founded DisruptHR SLC, currently serves as the Executive Director for Utah SHRM and acts as an advisor and member of several business-focused groups. Elisa holds the SHRM-SCP, SPHR, PRC and SHRM Talent Management Specialty Credential certifications. A true believer of the global impact HR can have on creating a better human experience, her career path now focuses on the advocacy and influence for the progression of the people function within the business environment.
Sign up for the event here.
Telling Our Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women
Exhibition
Merrill-Cazier Library joins the Year of the Woman celebration with the exhibit "Telling Out Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women." The exhibit is on display from October 1-November 23 in the Library Atrium. It can also be viewed digitally at http://exhibits.usu.edu/exhibits/show/tellingourstory.
Gallery East - "Continuum"
Arts/Entertainment
Charles Callis, “Continuum,” Paintings, October 14 – November 6
Place's and Faces of Utah's Coal Country
Arts/Entertainment
Noel A. Carmack is associate professor of art at USU Eastern. He received a BFA in illustration and MFA in drawing/painting from USU. About the work in this exhibition he says: Many of the coal mines, tipples, and powerhouse stacks in Utah are beginning to disappear, due to the decline of petroleum-based energy industries. The boom-and-bust economy of southeastern Utah is turning toward more favorable efficient energy sources, so the life and traditions of the men and women who are dependent on these industries are changing. These painings and drawings represent the deteriorating structures, the weathering marks left on the landscape, and the faces of the people who live and work in the area. The work is comprised of the following: 1) industrial landscapes, featuring the machinery, structures, and tools which have been used to mine or extract the natural resources of this area, and 2) portraits of the men and women whose lives are closely tied to eastern/southeastern Utah region.
African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection
Exhibition
"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.
Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction
Exhibition
During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.
The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope
Exhibition
Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.
"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.
Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.
MBA Virtual Information Session
Information/Orientation | Student Recruiting
This virtual information session is available to anyone interested in either pursuing an MBA or learning what an MBA could do for you. The session will cover frequently asked questions and will have a live Q&A panel made up of an MBA alum, MBA student, and the MBA team to answer any additional questions you may have. Please RSVP here to attend.
Leadership Week: Elevating Women’s Leadership in Organizations and Society
Panel Discussion/Presentation
The Stephen R. Covey Leadership Center and the Utah Women & Leadership Project and at Utah State University invite you to join us for a panel discussion on elevating women’s leadership in organizations and society.
This panel will discuss how the challenges and opportunities women encounter, as well as initiatives and strategies that have been found to make a difference in elevating women’s leadership. Join us as we hear from a panel of successful Utah women leaders as they share their own experiences of rising to leadership roles and helping other girls and women do the same.
Panel Host: Susan Madsen, Founder and Director, Utah Women & Leadership Project and Inaugural Karen Haight Huntsman Endowed Professor of Leadership
Panel Members:
- Pat Jones, CEO, Women’s Leadership Institute
- Kari Holt-Larson, Vice President of Community & Special Events, Utah Jazz
- Mary Crafts, Speaker, Podcaster, Author, and Founder of Culinary Crafts
The presentation will be live-streamed on the Huntsman YouTube Channel.
45th Annual Honors Last Lecture
Lecture/Readings
Join the University Honors Program, via Zoom webinar, for the 45th Annual Honors Last Lecture. Honors students nominated faculty, interviewed them, and selected Dr. Seth Archer (History) as this year’s Honors Outstanding Professor. Dr. Archer’s talk, "After the Vaccine: The United States Discovers Public Health," explores the U.S. government vaccination program for Native Americans in the 1830s, with connections to our current health crisis. A live Zoom Q&A immediately follows the lecture. At the time of the event, please join using the “watch now” button on the University Honors Program website.
USU Data Science Club Speaker Series: Tyler Lifke
Conference/Seminar
Tyler’s educational background is in neuroscience, where his passion for research led him to data science. As a data scientist at Level2, Tyler uses UnitedHealth Group's claims databases, Dexcom's continuous glucose monitors, and human-driven data science to deliver medication- independent treatment to Type II Diabetes patients.
USU SIAM Presents: Applying to Graduate School
Information/Orientation
Come learn about the process of studying and applying to Graduate School from 5 of our very own graduate students.
MAcc Information Session
Information/Orientation
Join us from anywhere in the world for an information webinar to learn more about the MAcc program at the David Eccles School of Business! We’ll talk about the program curriculum, scholarships, scheduling, and career successes. Register here to attend.
CCA's Midweek Music Series: Jazz Combos
Arts/Entertainment
Join us outdoors under the big tent on the Engineering Quad for a weekly concert brought to you by the Caine College of the Arts.
Telling Our Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women
Exhibition
Merrill-Cazier Library joins the Year of the Woman celebration with the exhibit "Telling Out Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women." The exhibit is on display from October 1-November 23 in the Library Atrium. It can also be viewed digitally at http://exhibits.usu.edu/exhibits/show/tellingourstory.
Gallery East - "Continuum"
Arts/Entertainment
Charles Callis, “Continuum,” Paintings, October 14 – November 6
Place's and Faces of Utah's Coal Country
Arts/Entertainment
Noel A. Carmack is associate professor of art at USU Eastern. He received a BFA in illustration and MFA in drawing/painting from USU. About the work in this exhibition he says: Many of the coal mines, tipples, and powerhouse stacks in Utah are beginning to disappear, due to the decline of petroleum-based energy industries. The boom-and-bust economy of southeastern Utah is turning toward more favorable efficient energy sources, so the life and traditions of the men and women who are dependent on these industries are changing. These painings and drawings represent the deteriorating structures, the weathering marks left on the landscape, and the faces of the people who live and work in the area. The work is comprised of the following: 1) industrial landscapes, featuring the machinery, structures, and tools which have been used to mine or extract the natural resources of this area, and 2) portraits of the men and women whose lives are closely tied to eastern/southeastern Utah region.
The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope
Exhibition
Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.
"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.
Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.
Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction
Exhibition
During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.
African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection
Exhibition
"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.
CIDI Workshop - Shortcuts and Tools to Take Your Canvas Course to the Next Level
Workshop/Training
You've learned how to use Design Tools, now get to know the amazing tools you didn't know existed! Did you know you could add an alert box to your front page with one click? That's the just the beginning of what's to come with this workshop.
Alumni Lunch Series: Digital Take-Out with Brad Plothow (BS Print Journalism)
Social/Networking
The CHaSS Alumni Lunch Series has gone online! Join us for Digital Take-Out as we discuss careers with esteemed alumni. Listen in and participate by asking questions during the live event on Zoom.
On Thursday, October 22, we'll feature Brad Plothow (BS Print Journalism) talking to us about trends. He currently leads corporate marketing, product marketing, channel marketing, content and communications, and design at Womply. A keen observer and frequent reporter on market trends, Brad will tell us how he and his team support revenue growth, communicate the value of Womply’s products, and have worked to build the brand into a household name. As a PR strategist at Method, his clients included some of Utah's biggest names in tech like Qualtrics, Pluralsight, and Instructure. Come learn more about careers in marketing and communications and how both the expected and unexpected events of 2020 have impacted this industry.
Listen in and participate by asking questions during the live virtual event on October 22 at 11am!
https://usu-edu.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_IzG55WBiTVSijZhbUe75yw
Graduate Student LGBTQ+ Support Group
Workshop/Training
This group is an opportunity for LGBTQA students to get together, learn from, and support each other. Each week, we will discuss pertinent issues (i.e. coming out to parents, the challenges of balancing academics and dating, relationship challenges, self-acceptance, advocate burn out, etc.). The topic of the day will be motivated by those who participate that day. This group will be co-facilitated by a psychologist from USU Counseling and Psychological Services (CAPS) and a staff from the USU Inclusion Center.
Contact CAPS to sign a service agreement and receive the Zoom link.
“Challenging Expertise: When Specialization Meets Democracy” by Dr. Jamie Watson
Conference/Seminar
Expertise is a problem for democracy. Democratic processes give every view equal weight, but experts tell us that their views are better than others. Democratic processes presume individuals are the best judge of their own interests, but experts tell us that we often act against our own interests. Can we resolve this tension and save both democracy and expertise? I will explain three ways that philosophers and political theorists suggest we should understand the relationship between expert and non-expert citizens. Then I will describe some features of expertise that may point to a new solution to problem of expertise for democracy.
Click here to register:
https://usu-edu.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZYld-6grj4jH9I16EmnkHc0SFD_tZk-dRQA
Voting Rights 1870, 1920, 1965, 2020 Symposium - Roundtable: Utah in the National Debate
Conference/Seminar | Year of the Woman
Roundtable: Utah in the National Debate - Moderated by Dr. Christy Glass
James Courage Singer, Diversity Fellow in Sociology & Ethnic Studies Salt Lake Community College; Former Candidate for U.S. Congress.
Katherine Kitterman, Historical Director for Better Days 2020, American University
John Mejia, Legal Director of the ACLU of Utah
Jeanetta Williams, President of NAACP, Salt Lake Branch
Sheri Newton, Voting Access Director, Disability Law Center
MSF Information Session
Information/Orientation
Join us from anywhere in the world for an information webinar to learn more about the MSF program at the David Eccles School of Business! We’ll talk about the program curriculum, scholarships, scheduling, and career successes. Register here to attend.
MRED Information Session
Information/Orientation
Join us from anywhere in the world for an information webinar to learn more about the MRED program at the David Eccles School of Business! We’ll talk about the program curriculum, scholarships, scheduling, and career successes. Register here to attend.
Speak to Lead
Student Activities
Refreshments provided
Public speaking is an important skillset for any leader, and it can only be mastered through practice. Speak to Lead is an opportunity for the Covey Leadership Fellows to hone their public speaking skills through a fun and challenging public speaking experience.
Join the Covey Leadership Fellows today to develop your public speaking skills through Speak to Lead.
Shingo Club Virtual Speaker - Ritsuo Shingo
Conference/Seminar
Ritsuo Shingo is the author of Toyota Production Systems and has worked in the Toyota plant his entire career. His father is the inspiration behind the Shingo Foundation and Shingo Prize. Join as we hear from the thought leaders of continuous improvement. Prior to the event, we ask participants to read his book- the club will provide this for all club members. Zoom link will be provided through club pages.
USU Symphony Orchestra
Arts/Entertainment
Open to students, faculty, and staff with USU ID. Students free, faculty/staff $10. No day-of-show ticket sales or online sales. CCA Box Office Monday - Friday, 2 - 5 p.m. L101, Chase Fine Arts Center, USU Campus 435-797-8022. After hours, tickets can be purchased at the USU Ticket Office in the Dee Glenn Smith Spectrum or by calling 435-797-0305. Open Monday - Friday, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Telling Our Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women
Exhibition
Merrill-Cazier Library joins the Year of the Woman celebration with the exhibit "Telling Out Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women." The exhibit is on display from October 1-November 23 in the Library Atrium. It can also be viewed digitally at http://exhibits.usu.edu/exhibits/show/tellingourstory.
Gallery East - "Continuum"
Arts/Entertainment
Charles Callis, “Continuum,” Paintings, October 14 – November 6
Place's and Faces of Utah's Coal Country
Arts/Entertainment
Noel A. Carmack is associate professor of art at USU Eastern. He received a BFA in illustration and MFA in drawing/painting from USU. About the work in this exhibition he says: Many of the coal mines, tipples, and powerhouse stacks in Utah are beginning to disappear, due to the decline of petroleum-based energy industries. The boom-and-bust economy of southeastern Utah is turning toward more favorable efficient energy sources, so the life and traditions of the men and women who are dependent on these industries are changing. These painings and drawings represent the deteriorating structures, the weathering marks left on the landscape, and the faces of the people who live and work in the area. The work is comprised of the following: 1) industrial landscapes, featuring the machinery, structures, and tools which have been used to mine or extract the natural resources of this area, and 2) portraits of the men and women whose lives are closely tied to eastern/southeastern Utah region.
Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction
Exhibition
During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.
The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope
Exhibition
Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.
"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.
Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.
African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection
Exhibition
"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.
Sun, Earth, Universe
Exhibition | Home, Family, and Food
Fridays - Sundays | 10 AM - 4 PM
FREE!
Swaner is pleased to offer the Sun, Earth, Universe exhibition in collaboration with NASA, the National Informal STEM Education Network (NISE Net) and NHMU! This is an interactive, English and Spanish bilingual exhibition about Earth and space science for families.
We explore questions about the Earth. How is Earth changing? We investigate questions about the solar system. What is it like on other planets? We consider questions about the universe. Are we alone?
Design, build, and test your own spacecraft to complete a NASA mission or put all your space mission-planning knowledge to the test by playing the Mission to Space board game. Will your mission be the first to be completed? What will you discover?
Weber School District Info Session
Information/Orientation
What if you could combine your passion for your academic major with your desire to make a difference in the lives of kids? Who has made the biggest difference in your life? The time and window to become a teacher in CTE of business, computer science, and engineering has never been better given the state’s flexible options to become a certified teachers. Your major can be a great springboard into the profession of teaching to inspire young people to gain skills and pursue education and careers in high wage, high demand areas. Please join us and come and see the possibility of changing lives through teaching! Register here to join us on Zoom.
Evidence-Based Sparkshop - Addressing Academically Unprepared Students
Conference/Seminar
ETE Sparkshops were created to "spark" creative ideas and methods for instructors. ETE Sparkshops are about 15 min-30 min a piece and can be requested by departments to be presented to their instructors, or can be requested by an instructor directly. This semester's sparkshop will be focused on how to address academically unprepared students.
Opportunities in Supply Chain and Operations Management
Panel Discussion/Presentation
Join us for panel discussion with representatives from Amazon, CED, England Logistics, and Enterprise Holdings, Inc. Learn about what is new with these organizations and what jobs are available in operations management and supply chain management.
Join the Zoom Meeting to participate in the Event.
CIDI Workshop - How to Quickly Create a Beautiful Canvas Course
Workshop/Training
Design Tools for Canvas allows you to rapidly stylize and build out your Canvas course, allowing you to focus more time on planning engaging content and learning activities in your course.
Halloween Havoc
Recreation
USU Pickleball Team is excited to host its first home tournament on Friday, October 23rd and Saturday, October 24th. There will be mixed doubles, men's doubles, and women's doubles in the skilled rated categories of 3.0, 3.5, 4.0, and 4.5/5.0. Registration is open to students and the public Thursday, October 8th through Thursday, October 22nd. Dress warm for the weather.
Applied Mathematics Seminar: A Gentle Introduction to Computational Statistical Catallactics
Conference/Seminar
Speaker: Tyler J. Brough, Jon M. Huntsman School of Business
ZOOM ID: 945 1753 3441 PWD: USUAMS
Abstract: In this talk, I will introduce you to the catallactic point of view of the Nobel Prize winners F.A. Hayek and James Buchanan. I will further discuss directions that I am now taking in my research agenda to deliver on Buchanan's challenge to create a sophisticated catallactics within economics. I will discuss how we can develop tools from the Agent-Based Computational Economics (ACE) tradition that are appropriate for this purpose. We will confront the critique of ACE models put forth by Steven Durlauf and offer ways to address this critique. I will discuss my current research into the options market-making function of derivatives markets as an application of these methods.
Speaker Series: Gene & Dorothy Dyer
Panel Discussion/Presentation
Join us for the the LAEP Speaker Series! On select Fridays throughout the semester, guest speakers from varying backgrounds share their experience and expertise, followed by a Q&A with students. This week we'll be joined by Gene & Dorothy Dyer as they give their lecture, "The Big, the Small, the Here and There."
Gene and Dorothy Dyer both graduated from the University of New Mexico School of Architecture with Master’s in Architecture. They both graduated with second Master’s from Harvard University in Urban Design and American Architectural Education. They practiced Architecture with their own Design firm, Dyer+Dyer, as well as worked for Moshe Safdie 34 years, and were involved with projects all over the world. They have been teaching throughout their careers.
Managing Stress and Anxiety
Workshop/Training
CAPS Workshops are free and open to USU Students, Faculty, and Staff. Workshops will be held virtually. Contact the CAPS Office at capsinfo@usu.edu to request the Zoom link.
Esports
Sports
Come watch in person or online as our USU Eastern Esports team competes against other teams in our conference.
Face coverings required and all USU & State COVID mandates to be observed if attending in person.
Keep up on all of USU Eastern Athletics on Facebook
https://www.facebook.com/UtahStateEasternAthletics
Science Unwrapped: Exploring AI and Machine Learning from the Perspective of a Cybersecurity Professional
Panel Discussion/Presentation | Science Unwrapped
Join us Friday evening, Oct. 23, as we welcome Idaho National Lab chief security scientist Charmaine Sample as featured speaker at Science Unwrapped. Dr. Sample presents "Smart Cookies: Exploring AI and Machine Learning from the Perspective of a Cybersecurity Professional" at 7 p.m. via Zoom. Tune in at www.usu.edu/science/unwrapped, submit your questions following the talk and view the video learning activities prepared by Science Unwrapped volunteers.
HOWL Freaky Friday Drive-in-Movie
Arts/Entertainment
We will be showing Movies for students only as part of our annual HOWL Celebration.
Tickets are available at the TSC Card Office or Spectrum Ticket Office the week of the Movie.
The shows will be the following.
Oct 9th: The Sixth Sense
Oct 16th: Hocus Pocus
Oct 23rd: Scary Stories to Tell in The Dark
Oct 30th: Happy Death Day & Happy Death Day 2U (double feature)
Telling Our Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women
Exhibition
Merrill-Cazier Library joins the Year of the Woman celebration with the exhibit "Telling Out Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women." The exhibit is on display from October 1-November 23 in the Library Atrium. It can also be viewed digitally at http://exhibits.usu.edu/exhibits/show/tellingourstory.
Sun, Earth, Universe
Exhibition | Home, Family, and Food
Fridays - Sundays | 10 AM - 4 PM
FREE!
Swaner is pleased to offer the Sun, Earth, Universe exhibition in collaboration with NASA, the National Informal STEM Education Network (NISE Net) and NHMU! This is an interactive, English and Spanish bilingual exhibition about Earth and space science for families.
We explore questions about the Earth. How is Earth changing? We investigate questions about the solar system. What is it like on other planets? We consider questions about the universe. Are we alone?
Design, build, and test your own spacecraft to complete a NASA mission or put all your space mission-planning knowledge to the test by playing the Mission to Space board game. Will your mission be the first to be completed? What will you discover?
Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction
Exhibition
During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.
African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection
Exhibition
"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.
The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope
Exhibition
Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.
"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.
Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.
Halloween Havoc
Recreation
USU Pickleball Team is excited to host its first home tournament on Friday, October 23rd and Saturday, October 24th. There will be mixed doubles, men's doubles, and women's doubles in the skilled rated categories of 3.0, 3.5, 4.0, and 4.5/5.0. Registration is open to students and the public Thursday, October 8th through Thursday, October 22nd. Dress warm for the weather.
Telling Our Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women
Exhibition
Merrill-Cazier Library joins the Year of the Woman celebration with the exhibit "Telling Out Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women." The exhibit is on display from October 1-November 23 in the Library Atrium. It can also be viewed digitally at http://exhibits.usu.edu/exhibits/show/tellingourstory.
Sun, Earth, Universe
Exhibition | Home, Family, and Food
Fridays - Sundays | 10 AM - 4 PM
FREE!
Swaner is pleased to offer the Sun, Earth, Universe exhibition in collaboration with NASA, the National Informal STEM Education Network (NISE Net) and NHMU! This is an interactive, English and Spanish bilingual exhibition about Earth and space science for families.
We explore questions about the Earth. How is Earth changing? We investigate questions about the solar system. What is it like on other planets? We consider questions about the universe. Are we alone?
Design, build, and test your own spacecraft to complete a NASA mission or put all your space mission-planning knowledge to the test by playing the Mission to Space board game. Will your mission be the first to be completed? What will you discover?
Telling Our Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women
Exhibition
Merrill-Cazier Library joins the Year of the Woman celebration with the exhibit "Telling Out Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women." The exhibit is on display from October 1-November 23 in the Library Atrium. It can also be viewed digitally at http://exhibits.usu.edu/exhibits/show/tellingourstory.
True Eagle
Student Activities
Take a picture with Gibby and post it to social media tagging USU Eastern. Then get a t-shirt from EUSA. There will be prizes for the different categories.
Gallery East - "Continuum"
Arts/Entertainment
Charles Callis, “Continuum,” Paintings, October 14 – November 6
Place's and Faces of Utah's Coal Country
Arts/Entertainment
Noel A. Carmack is associate professor of art at USU Eastern. He received a BFA in illustration and MFA in drawing/painting from USU. About the work in this exhibition he says: Many of the coal mines, tipples, and powerhouse stacks in Utah are beginning to disappear, due to the decline of petroleum-based energy industries. The boom-and-bust economy of southeastern Utah is turning toward more favorable efficient energy sources, so the life and traditions of the men and women who are dependent on these industries are changing. These painings and drawings represent the deteriorating structures, the weathering marks left on the landscape, and the faces of the people who live and work in the area. The work is comprised of the following: 1) industrial landscapes, featuring the machinery, structures, and tools which have been used to mine or extract the natural resources of this area, and 2) portraits of the men and women whose lives are closely tied to eastern/southeastern Utah region.
Faith Challenges Support Group
Workshop/Training
This group is an opportunity for students to get together in a safe environment, learn from, and support each other. Each week, we will discuss pertinent issues related to faith that create stress (e.g., having faith doubts or internal conflict with elements of your faith, clarifying your spiritual identity, stresses associated with faith transitions, finding a spiritual place of belonging, talking to those of different faiths, etc.). The topic of the day will be motivated by those who participate that day. This group will be facilitated by Monique Frazier, a psychologist from USU Counseling and Psychological Services (CAPS).
Please contact CAPS to sign a service agreement and get the Zoom link.
USU Orem SWAG Week
Student Activities
All 2020 USU Orem Students: We will be handing out COVID care kits that have Aggie Strong hand sanitizer, two USU branded face masks, a digital thermometer, and a "Do Your Part" pamphlet and sticker. We will be handing these out next week starting October 26th - October 29th from 4:30 PM -7:30 PM. See you then!
Entrepreneurship Club $100 Startup Pitch Competition
Social/Networking
What: Students and club members pitch their business ideas to a panel of judges for a chance to win $100 to help start up their business
Who: E-club members and community
When: Monday @5:00 PM
Where: Huntsman Hall 320 or Huntsman School of Business courtyard
Why: Compete and win money and prizes for your business
How: Come compete and pitch your business to a panel of judges! there will be money and prizes granted if you win
Midweek Movie - The Goonies (Cancelled)
Arts/Entertainment
Come see movies on the big screen, the way they were intended. Entrance is only $1.00.
Telling Our Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women
Exhibition
Merrill-Cazier Library joins the Year of the Woman celebration with the exhibit "Telling Out Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women." The exhibit is on display from October 1-November 23 in the Library Atrium. It can also be viewed digitally at http://exhibits.usu.edu/exhibits/show/tellingourstory.
Tiny Pricks
Arts/Entertainment
Tiny Pricks is a public art project created and curated by Diana Weymar. Contributors from around the world are stitching Donald Trump’s words into textiles, creating the material record of his presidency and of the movement against it. Tiny Pricks Project holds a creative space in a tumultuous political climate. The collection counterbalances the impermanence of Twitter and other social media, and Trump’s statements as president through the use of textiles that embody warmth, craft, permanence, civility, and a shared history. The daintiness and integrity of each piece stand in stark contrast to his presidency. Sandra Charlson organized local community members, faculty, staff, and students to participate in this project.
Gallery East - "Continuum"
Arts/Entertainment
Charles Callis, “Continuum,” Paintings, October 14 – November 6
Place's and Faces of Utah's Coal Country
Arts/Entertainment
Noel A. Carmack is associate professor of art at USU Eastern. He received a BFA in illustration and MFA in drawing/painting from USU. About the work in this exhibition he says: Many of the coal mines, tipples, and powerhouse stacks in Utah are beginning to disappear, due to the decline of petroleum-based energy industries. The boom-and-bust economy of southeastern Utah is turning toward more favorable efficient energy sources, so the life and traditions of the men and women who are dependent on these industries are changing. These painings and drawings represent the deteriorating structures, the weathering marks left on the landscape, and the faces of the people who live and work in the area. The work is comprised of the following: 1) industrial landscapes, featuring the machinery, structures, and tools which have been used to mine or extract the natural resources of this area, and 2) portraits of the men and women whose lives are closely tied to eastern/southeastern Utah region.
The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope
Exhibition
Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.
"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.
Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.
Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction
Exhibition
During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.
African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection
Exhibition
"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.
Social Justice, Systemic Racism Substantive Acts of Support
Conference/Seminar
Marisela Martinez-Cola, Assistant Professor, College of Humanities & Social Sciences
Silicon Slopes Career Event
Information/Orientation
Meet with top tech companies that have put down roots in Utah. Learn all about career opportunities for new grads and internships and the awesome lifestyle Utah offers! Registration for this event has closed.
CIDI Workshop - Advanced Atomic Assessments - Settings
Workshop/Training
This workshop takes a deeper dive into the Atomic Assessments tool, focusing on settings--particularly in quantitative questions and item banks, along with other nuances.
Biology Seminar Speaker Series: Dr. Theresa Crimmins
Conference/Seminar
Dr. Theresa Crimmins from USA National Phenology Network will present a talk on "The USA National Phenology Network: Data, Tools, and Resources to Support Science, Management, and Outreach" virtually on Zoom. Join Seminar: https://usu-edu.zoom.us/j/96328887734?pwd=Q0RLY2cvSVF2UTEzNytaai9HS25ZZz09
IOGP's Informed Citizen Series: Robert Wagner
Conference/Seminar
This Informed Citizens Series is a virtual discussion on coordinating USU's reopening amidst the Covid-19 pandemic with Robert Wagner. To RSVP e-mail iogp@usu.edu
CHaSS Alumni Presentation: Maj Joe Phippen (Speech Comm '09)
Special Event
Join us on Tuesday, October 27 for a discussion with CHaSS alum, Major Joe Phippen. Major Phippen graduated with a BA in Speech Communication from Utah State University in 2009 before joining the US Marines. His military career has seen deployments to Afghanistan, Korea, and the Western Pacific. He currently serves as the Assistant Secretary for Operations with the United Nations Command in the Korean Demilitarized Zone.
Major Phippen will share how his undergraduate experience has impacted his military career during an informal and open discussion with current students. Participants are thus encouraged to come with questions to this virtual event.
This CHaSS Alumni presentation will be held on Skype (no account needed). Register now on Handshake to receive the link to join us on October 27: https://usu.joinhandshake.com/events/607345
Esports
Sports
Come watch in person or online as our USU Eastern Esports team competes against other teams in our conference.
Face coverings required and all USU & State COVID mandates to be observed if attending in person.
Keep up on all USU Eastern Athletics on Facebook
https://www.facebook.com/UtahStateEasternAthletics
Pumpkin Painting
Student Activities
Come paint pumpkins on the fountain field from 6-8pm.
Aggie Hollows Drive Through
Arts/Entertainment
This spooky drive through will take place one night only. Drive through if you dare. All USU Students are welcome. Get your tickets at the USU Card Office or Spectrum Ticket Office.
Telling Our Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women
Exhibition
Merrill-Cazier Library joins the Year of the Woman celebration with the exhibit "Telling Out Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women." The exhibit is on display from October 1-November 23 in the Library Atrium. It can also be viewed digitally at http://exhibits.usu.edu/exhibits/show/tellingourstory.
It’s in Our Genes (Segment 1, Understanding Gender for Educators & Parents)
Workshop/Training
The Utah Women & Leadership Project invites you to join us for Segment 1 of a 4-part webinar series titled "Why Gender Matters for Teachers & Parents: An In-Depth Exploration."
Why Gender Matters for Teachers & Parents: Segment 1 - It’s in Our Genes
Description: This webinar introduces educators and parents to research studies that can help them understand the biological distinctions between boys and girls, young men and young women, and men and women. Comprehending the inherent gender differences will help educators and parents integrate knowledge that can further maximize student learning and have the greatest impact on educational outcomes. We will explore how girls and boys see, smell, hear, and communicate similarly and differently, and how educators and parents can maximize the student’s innate abilities by creating responsive and dynamic learning environments.
Gallery East - "Continuum"
Arts/Entertainment
Charles Callis, “Continuum,” Paintings, October 14 – November 6
Tiny Pricks
Arts/Entertainment
Tiny Pricks is a public art project created and curated by Diana Weymar. Contributors from around the world are stitching Donald Trump’s words into textiles, creating the material record of his presidency and of the movement against it. Tiny Pricks Project holds a creative space in a tumultuous political climate. The collection counterbalances the impermanence of Twitter and other social media, and Trump’s statements as president through the use of textiles that embody warmth, craft, permanence, civility, and a shared history. The daintiness and integrity of each piece stand in stark contrast to his presidency. Sandra Charlson organized local community members, faculty, staff, and students to participate in this project.
Place's and Faces of Utah's Coal Country
Arts/Entertainment
Noel A. Carmack is associate professor of art at USU Eastern. He received a BFA in illustration and MFA in drawing/painting from USU. About the work in this exhibition he says: Many of the coal mines, tipples, and powerhouse stacks in Utah are beginning to disappear, due to the decline of petroleum-based energy industries. The boom-and-bust economy of southeastern Utah is turning toward more favorable efficient energy sources, so the life and traditions of the men and women who are dependent on these industries are changing. These painings and drawings represent the deteriorating structures, the weathering marks left on the landscape, and the faces of the people who live and work in the area. The work is comprised of the following: 1) industrial landscapes, featuring the machinery, structures, and tools which have been used to mine or extract the natural resources of this area, and 2) portraits of the men and women whose lives are closely tied to eastern/southeastern Utah region.
African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection
Exhibition
"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.
Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction
Exhibition
During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.
The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope
Exhibition
Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.
"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.
Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.
School Counseling Panel & Student Q & A Session
Panel Discussion/Presentation
Thinking about a career in school counseling? Get ready to learn about four people's journeys to becoming school counselors. Joining our presentation is:
-Clark Ripplinger, a licensed psychologist for Utah State University who works in Counseling and Psychological Services
-Lissette Blanchard, a High School Counselor for Provo High School
-Christi Blankman, a K-12 School Counselor, Prevention Coordinator, and member of the Crisis Response Team
-Tiffany Wiberg, a School Counselor for Utah Virtual Academy
There will be a Q&A session immediately following the presenter's introductions and backgrounds. Register today to secure your spot!
FPA Meeting: Financial Planning Tech with Brian Wilde
Workshop/Training
Brian Wilde from EP Wealth will be coming to speak to our club about financial planning tech. Bring your laptops and come in person, or join via Zoom.
An Interview with Women in International Business
Panel Discussion/Presentation
WIBA and the International Business Club are partnering for An Interview with Women in International Business.
Come learn from some inspiring women about what it is like to work and live internationally as well as how to correspond with others internationally.
Speakers:
Shaba Shams - Entrepreneur, Influencer, Podcaster of "Shaba Speaks From the USA", and Education Literacy For All Advocate.
Liz Allred - Program Director for Global Learning in the Huntsman School of Business.
Tune into the live event on the Huntsman YouTube Channel.
Worms at Work! Virtual Vermicompost Workshop
Workshop/Training | Gardening
$7 per person | Free for Swaner members
Curious about indoor worm composting (vermicomposting) but don’t know where to start? Join Sustainable Communities Specialist Roslynn McCann and USU Permaculture Initiative’s Kate Weigel as they explore various bin designs, the do’s and don’ts for maintaining your bin, the best types of worms to use, and how to separate your worm castings so you can use them. Bring your questions!
This event is presented in partnership with USU Extension Summit County and the USU Permaculture Initiative.
As per the requirements of Utah State University's infectious disease plan, Summit County guidelines, and Swaner's concern for our community's health and safety, this interactive lecture will take place via Zoom Webinar. Once registered, you will receive instructions for how to access the webinar in your confirmation email. We will also be recording this lecture and will share it with registrants afterwards.
CCA's Midweek Music Series: Jazz Jams
Arts/Entertainment
Join us outdoors under the big tent on the Engineering Quad for this week's Jazz Jams. This concert is a jam session featuring USU jazz students and guest artist David Baker. Dr. Baker is an accomplished bassist and composer and the newly appointed Director of Jazz and Commercial Music at Utah Valley University. If you're unable to attend the concert in person, stream the performance live at ccapresents.usu.edu.
HOWL Comedian; Matt Baker
Arts/Entertainment
Matt Baker is a Comedy & Stunt Performer based in Seattle WA. Voted Seattle's Funniest Prop Comic, a Guinness world record holder and has been featured TV shows like America's Got Talent and Last Comic Standing. Students can get their tickets at the TSC Card office or Spectrum Ticket office.
Halloween Bash (Cancelled)
Student Activities
Get your Halloween spirit on with the Halloween Bash with games, photo booth, treats, and italian soda. Costumes are welcomed, face coverings are required! In the MPR from 8-10pm.
Telling Our Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women
Exhibition
Merrill-Cazier Library joins the Year of the Woman celebration with the exhibit "Telling Out Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women." The exhibit is on display from October 1-November 23 in the Library Atrium. It can also be viewed digitally at http://exhibits.usu.edu/exhibits/show/tellingourstory.
Tiny Pricks
Arts/Entertainment
Tiny Pricks is a public art project created and curated by Diana Weymar. Contributors from around the world are stitching Donald Trump’s words into textiles, creating the material record of his presidency and of the movement against it. Tiny Pricks Project holds a creative space in a tumultuous political climate. The collection counterbalances the impermanence of Twitter and other social media, and Trump’s statements as president through the use of textiles that embody warmth, craft, permanence, civility, and a shared history. The daintiness and integrity of each piece stand in stark contrast to his presidency. Sandra Charlson organized local community members, faculty, staff, and students to participate in this project.
Gallery East - "Continuum"
Arts/Entertainment
Charles Callis, “Continuum,” Paintings, October 14 – November 6
Place's and Faces of Utah's Coal Country
Arts/Entertainment
Noel A. Carmack is associate professor of art at USU Eastern. He received a BFA in illustration and MFA in drawing/painting from USU. About the work in this exhibition he says: Many of the coal mines, tipples, and powerhouse stacks in Utah are beginning to disappear, due to the decline of petroleum-based energy industries. The boom-and-bust economy of southeastern Utah is turning toward more favorable efficient energy sources, so the life and traditions of the men and women who are dependent on these industries are changing. These painings and drawings represent the deteriorating structures, the weathering marks left on the landscape, and the faces of the people who live and work in the area. The work is comprised of the following: 1) industrial landscapes, featuring the machinery, structures, and tools which have been used to mine or extract the natural resources of this area, and 2) portraits of the men and women whose lives are closely tied to eastern/southeastern Utah region.
The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope
Exhibition
Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.
"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.
Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.
Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction
Exhibition
During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.
African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection
Exhibition
"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.
Graduate Student LGBTQ+ Support Group
Workshop/Training
This group is an opportunity for LGBTQA students to get together, learn from, and support each other. Each week, we will discuss pertinent issues (i.e. coming out to parents, the challenges of balancing academics and dating, relationship challenges, self-acceptance, advocate burn out, etc.). The topic of the day will be motivated by those who participate that day. This group will be co-facilitated by a psychologist from USU Counseling and Psychological Services (CAPS) and a staff from the USU Inclusion Center.
Contact CAPS to sign a service agreement and receive the Zoom link.
CIDI Workshop - Running Secure Exams in Canvas
Workshop/Training
This workshop addresses how to create exams in Canvas, plus tools and methods for protecting quiz content and ensuring academic integrity when in-person proctoring isn't an option. (Includes discussion of Proctorio, question banks, time limits, question design, and more.)
Writing for the Popular Press: A Workshop for Utah Women
Workshop/Training
Whether it’s education, healthcare, the environment, politics, or the pandemic, our state is facing critical crossroads in so many areas, and Utah women have important insights and viewpoints about all of them. Yet in Utah, the majority of op-eds and other opinion pieces are still written by men. Why is it that so many Utah women do not state their opinions publicly? This workshop will provide insights on why you should write for the popular press and include tips and tools on how to discover what issues you can best write about. Holly and Heather will then help you learn to structure an op-ed, letter to the editor, blog post, solutions journalism piece, and other opinion pieces. The workshop will also include time spent in Zoom breakout rooms where you can discuss your ideas in a small group. During part of the second hour, Holly and Heather will split the attendees into two groups to answer questions and to provide more fine-tuned instruction. Finally, the full group will reconvene briefly so that the presenters can share final thoughts and discuss next steps. Join us for this event. You have a voice, and the popular press in Utah needs it!
“Gamification and Value Capture” by Dr. Thi Ngyuen
Conference/Seminar
Value capture occurs when an agent’s values are rich and subtle; they enter a social environment that presents simplified — typically quantified — versions of those values; and those simplified articulations come to dominate their practical reasoning. Examples include becoming motivated by FitBit’s step counts, Twitter Likes and Retweets, citation rates, ranked lists of best schools, and Grade Point Averages. Value capture poses several threats. First, it threatens to change the goals of our activities, in a way that often threatens to undermine the value of those activities. Second, in value capture, we take a central component of our autonomy — our ongoing deliberation over the exact articulation of our values — and we outsource it. That outsourcing cuts off one of the key benefits to personal deliberation. In value capture, we no longer adjust our values and their articulations in light of own rich experience of the world. Our values should be carefully tailored to our particular selves, but in value capture, we buy our values off the rack.
HPER Haunt
Recreation
The Haunted HPER will include: Halloween HIGH Fitness, Haunted Canoe Rides, Yard games, candy and more!
HPER Haunt
Recreation
The HPER Haunt will include: Halloween HIGH fitness, Haunted Canoe Rides, Yard Games, Candy and more.
RA Bingo Night (Zoom)
Student Activities
Join us on Zoom for a fun Bingo night with the RAs.
Virtual Bingo Night
Student Activities
Come play virtual bingo with us!
Telling Our Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women
Exhibition
Merrill-Cazier Library joins the Year of the Woman celebration with the exhibit "Telling Out Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women." The exhibit is on display from October 1-November 23 in the Library Atrium. It can also be viewed digitally at http://exhibits.usu.edu/exhibits/show/tellingourstory.
Tiny Pricks
Arts/Entertainment
Tiny Pricks is a public art project created and curated by Diana Weymar. Contributors from around the world are stitching Donald Trump’s words into textiles, creating the material record of his presidency and of the movement against it. Tiny Pricks Project holds a creative space in a tumultuous political climate. The collection counterbalances the impermanence of Twitter and other social media, and Trump’s statements as president through the use of textiles that embody warmth, craft, permanence, civility, and a shared history. The daintiness and integrity of each piece stand in stark contrast to his presidency. Sandra Charlson organized local community members, faculty, staff, and students to participate in this project.
Gallery East - "Continuum"
Arts/Entertainment
Charles Callis, “Continuum,” Paintings, October 14 – November 6
Place's and Faces of Utah's Coal Country
Arts/Entertainment
Noel A. Carmack is associate professor of art at USU Eastern. He received a BFA in illustration and MFA in drawing/painting from USU. About the work in this exhibition he says: Many of the coal mines, tipples, and powerhouse stacks in Utah are beginning to disappear, due to the decline of petroleum-based energy industries. The boom-and-bust economy of southeastern Utah is turning toward more favorable efficient energy sources, so the life and traditions of the men and women who are dependent on these industries are changing. These painings and drawings represent the deteriorating structures, the weathering marks left on the landscape, and the faces of the people who live and work in the area. The work is comprised of the following: 1) industrial landscapes, featuring the machinery, structures, and tools which have been used to mine or extract the natural resources of this area, and 2) portraits of the men and women whose lives are closely tied to eastern/southeastern Utah region.
Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction
Exhibition
During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.
The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope
Exhibition
Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.
"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.
Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.
African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection
Exhibition
"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.
Sun, Earth, Universe
Exhibition | Home, Family, and Food
Fridays - Sundays | 10 AM - 4 PM
FREE!
Swaner is pleased to offer the Sun, Earth, Universe exhibition in collaboration with NASA, the National Informal STEM Education Network (NISE Net) and NHMU! This is an interactive, English and Spanish bilingual exhibition about Earth and space science for families.
We explore questions about the Earth. How is Earth changing? We investigate questions about the solar system. What is it like on other planets? We consider questions about the universe. Are we alone?
Design, build, and test your own spacecraft to complete a NASA mission or put all your space mission-planning knowledge to the test by playing the Mission to Space board game. Will your mission be the first to be completed? What will you discover?
Leadership Forum: Heidi Melin, Workfront
Panel Discussion/Presentation | Focused Friday
How do you drive brand awareness in an age of global competition? What skills and attributes get you in the door and help you succeed in marketing careers, or just professionally? Just what exactly is SaaS, and why is it important to you? Learn from Heidi Melin, Chief Marketing Officer at Workfront. The presentation will be live-streamed on the Huntsman YouTube Channel.
Who's Hiring in Human Resources?
Panel Discussion/Presentation
Join us for a virtual panel with HR leaders from companies like BambooHR, NexeoHR, and International Paper. Please join us live on Zoom.
CIDI Workshop - Getting Started With Zoom
Workshop/Training
Learn the basics of Zoom, including scheduling, recording, managing settings, and making a good learning environment for your students.
Esports
Sports
Come watch in person or online as our USU Eastern Esports Team competes against other teams in our conference and league.
Face coverings required and all USU & State COVID mandates to be observed if attending in person.
JLSC 451 E 400 N Price, UT 84501
Keep up on all USU Eastern Athletics on Facebook
https://www.facebook.com/UtahStateEasternAthletics
Monster Concert
Arts/Entertainment
The USU Youth Conservatory is excited about bringing you a Monster Concert like never before...to your very own living room! Don't miss your chance to see kids from all around the map come together (in costume!) to create a special Halloween piano concert extravaganza. The concert will be premiered on YouTube live so be sure to grab the remote, pop some popcorn, and have fun enjoying the show with your family in the comfort of your own home!
Women's Volleyball
Sports
vs. Colorado Northwestern Community College
HOWL Freaky Friday Drive-in-Movie
Arts/Entertainment
We will be showing Movies for students only as part of our annual HOWL Celebration.
Tickets are available at the TSC Card Office or Spectrum Ticket Office the week of the Movie.
The shows will be the following.
Oct 9th: The Sixth Sense
Oct 16th: Hocus Pocus
Oct 23rd: Scary Stories to Tell in The Dark
Oct 30th: Happy Death Day & Happy Death Day 2U (double feature)
Virtual Murder Mystery
Student Activities
Come join us for a fun virtual Murder Mystery party 8:30pm-9:30pm over Zoom.
Telling Our Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women
Exhibition
Merrill-Cazier Library joins the Year of the Woman celebration with the exhibit "Telling Out Story: 130 Years of Aggie Women." The exhibit is on display from October 1-November 23 in the Library Atrium. It can also be viewed digitally at http://exhibits.usu.edu/exhibits/show/tellingourstory.
Sun, Earth, Universe
Exhibition | Home, Family, and Food
Fridays - Sundays | 10 AM - 4 PM
FREE!
Swaner is pleased to offer the Sun, Earth, Universe exhibition in collaboration with NASA, the National Informal STEM Education Network (NISE Net) and NHMU! This is an interactive, English and Spanish bilingual exhibition about Earth and space science for families.
We explore questions about the Earth. How is Earth changing? We investigate questions about the solar system. What is it like on other planets? We consider questions about the universe. Are we alone?
Design, build, and test your own spacecraft to complete a NASA mission or put all your space mission-planning knowledge to the test by playing the Mission to Space board game. Will your mission be the first to be completed? What will you discover?
The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope
Exhibition
Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.
"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.
Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.
African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection
Exhibition
"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.
Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction
Exhibition
During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.
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