2:00–4:00 p.m.
From Jan. 21 and continuing until March 18, the Northwest Native American Language Resource Center (NW-NALRC) will be holding weekly consultation and assistance times.
From 2-3pm PST we will be providing consultation and assistance with Community Projects and Planning.
From 3-4pm PST we will be providing consultation and assistance for Supporting Language Teaching and Learning.
To join, please fill out this short form https://forms.office.com/r/D2pg3wErfj.
If you are in need of assistance, or if you have any questions, please contact nalrc@uoregon.edu.
3:00–6:00 p.m.
Are you a tech-savvy Duck looking to explore career paths? Come meet employers looking to connect with students interested in working in tech! Stop by EMU Redwood (214) anytime between 3-6, ready to learn about new opportunities, and share about your passions and goals with people who could be your future coworkers! Walk away with industry connections, potential job opportunities, and the inside industry scoop on what it takes to land competitive opportunities in this fast-paced industry. Free light refreshments provided! Open to all students and majors!
WHO'S COMING?
- Amazon Web Services (Technology/Cloud Provider)
- BPM (Cybersecurity Consulting & Assessments)
- CrowdStrike (Cybersecurity)
- Fortinet (Cybersecurity)
- IP Services & the IT Process Institute (Cybersecurity) learn more!
- Modern Amenities (Start-up/Call Center)
- Pipeworks (Video Game Development) learn more!
- Proofpoint (Cybersecurity)
- SentinelOne (Cybersecurity)
- SheerID (Marketing Tech)
- State of Oregon - Enterprise Information Services (State Government)
- Zscaler Inc. (Cybersecurity)
Hosted by the University Career Center & School of Computer and Data Science.
4:30 p.m.
The Creative Writing Program invites you to a fiction reading with Stephanie Reents.
Stephanie Reents's debut novel is We Loved to Run. She's also the author of The Kissing List, a collection of stories that was an Editors' Choice in The New York Times Book Review, and I Meant to Kill Ye, a bibliomemoir chronicling her journey into the strange void at the heart of Cormac McCarthy's Blood Medirian. She has twice received an O. Henry Prize for her short fiction. Reents received a BA from Amherst College, where she ran on the cross country team all four years. She was a Stegner Fellow at Stanford University. For more information, visit Stephanie Reents's website.
6:00 p.m.
Filmlandia Screening Series presents: A Short Film Program. Free and open to the public.
This series of short films made in and about Portland, Oregon, highlights the diverse ways that the city has been experienced and imagined, from satirical tourist films and parodies through home movies, experimental films, and a surreal Civil Defense documentary. Come take a journey into the weird and wonderful cinematic visions of Portland!
The Department of Cinema Studies and the University Film Society celebrate Oregon’s rich film heritage with a new screening series showcasing movies with a unique Oregon connection—from locally shot features to stories written or directed by Oregon filmmakers. Discover Oregon’s reel legacy on the big screen while connecting with the university film community.
Cosponsored by: Harlan J. Strauss Visiting Filmmaker Endowment; Department of Comparative Literature; Department of English; Department of Indigenous, Race, and Ethnic Studies; Native American and Indigenous Studies; Folklore and Public Culture Program; Art House Theater; DUX Present; and Oregon Humanities Center’s Endowment for Public Outreach in the Arts, Sciences, and Humanities.
6:00–7:30 p.m.
Learn about different career paths in the real estate industry and the foundations of financial analysis from guest speakers, hands-on workshops, and site tours. Join the UO Real Estate Investment Group for our weekly meetings every Wednesday in Lillis 132 from 6:00–7:30 p.m.! Our club is open to all and no application is required.
noon
Interested in studying abroad in London in the 2026-2027 academic year? Stop by to learn more about your options!
Canceled.
4:00–5:00 p.m.
Canceled.
5:30–7:00 p.m.
Join in person in Knight Law Center 175 or via livestream for this timely discussion, which will be followed by audience Q&A. It is part of the Wayne Morse Center's 2025-2027 Theme of Inquiry Common Ground: Cities, Towns, and Counties Confronting Shared Challenges and is free and open to the public.
Click here to join the livestream. No registration required. Free and open to the public.
Moderated by Dr. Lesley Jo Weaver (UO), Associate Professor at the University of Oregon and co-director of the Homelessness Policy and Health Research Group
UCLA sociologist Chris Herring’s research focuses on poverty, homelessness, and housing in US cities. His current book project is an ethnography of the criminalization of homelessness in San Francisco to be published with UC Press. He has co-directed two participatory action research projects and publications with the San Francisco Coalition on Homelessness, where he organized with the Human Rights Working Group. Herring served as a researcher at the San Francisco’s Mayor’s Office of Homelessness and has collaborated on research with the National Coalition on Homelessness, Anti-Eviction Mapping Project, the Western Regional Advocacy Project, and ACORN. He regularly consults with county governments, think tanks, and legal aid groups.
Herring’s writing has appeared in the Washington Post, Places, Progressive Planning, Shelterforce, the Berkeley Journal of Sociology, and homeless street newspapers across the US and Canada. His research and commentary has also been featured in the LA Times, NY Times, UK Guardian, Al Jazeera, the San Francisco Chronicle, Bloomberg’s City Lab, and other outlets.
UO Professor Claire Herbert's research focuses on law, housing, property, and urban sociology. Her book, A Detroit Story: Urban Decline and the Rise of Property Informality was published with University of California Press in 2021. In this book, she examines the way that de jure illegal uses of property - like squatting, scrapping, and gardening - shape the form of the city, neighborhood conditions, and residents’ well being.
Professor Herbert is currently writing a book called When Home is Illegal: Unsheltered Homelessness in America which examines the interaction between local regulations, enforcement, and the well-being of residents experiencing unsheltered homelessness. Professor Herbert is also Co-PI on an NSF-funded, mixed-methods project called "Informality and Inequality in the Global North: Regulation, Non-Compliance, and Enforcement in US Land Use and Housing Law" which studies informal infill: housing units produced in violation of local regulations but that provide an important source of affordable housing.
3:00–6:00 p.m.
Stand out on LinkedIn and beyond with a polished, professional headshot.
Free for CAS students. No registration needed; wait time may vary.
5:30–8:00 p.m.
We have a very fun event planned for Spanish Heritage students! We will be attending the one-hour opera of La Vida Breve together and mingling at the McArthur Court Lounge for refreshments beforehand. Please join us!
5:30-6:30 - Refreshments and mingling in McArthur Court Lounge 6:30 - walk to Beall Concert Hall together through the cemetery 7-8 - La Vida Breve, opera performance at Beall Concert Hall
Tickets available for FREE with Student ID - pick up at EMU Ticket Office. We have 20 tickets reserved for the program. Please email shlassistant@uoregon.edu to reserve your ticket.