Events

Nov 6
Wisconsin Postdoc Expo 2024 8:00 a.m.

This half-day FREE event will be open to all students or trainees interested in pursuing postdoctoral training in the near future. The focus of this event is to highlight the...
Wisconsin Postdoc Expo 2024
November 6
8:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m.

This half-day FREE event will be open to all students or trainees interested in pursuing postdoctoral training in the near future. The focus of this event is to highlight the unique experiences of being a postdoc at one of our four institutions in Milwaukee and Madison:

Medical College of Wisconsin Morgridge Institute for Research University of Wisconsin–Madison Versiti Blood Research Institute

Event Details

Navigating the transition into a postdoc position Choosing and securing the right postdoc opportunity for you Exploring the Wisconsin postdoc experience Leveraging your postdoc experience to achieve your career goals

Find out more and register at https://wipostdocexpo.org/

Nov 6
Let's Talk - Wednesdays Noon-2MP (Peterson Hall/Zoom) noon

Meet with Counseling Services Rachel Barloon at Peterson 203 or click here: https://zoom.us/j/98335445813   Let’s Talk is a service that provides easy access to...
Let's Talk - Wednesdays Noon-2MP (Peterson Hall/Zoom)
October 16–December 11
noon

Meet with Counseling Services Rachel Barloon at Peterson 203 or click here: https://zoom.us/j/98335445813

 

Let’s Talk is a service that provides easy access to free, informal, and confidential one-on-one consultation with a Counseling Services staff member. See our website for six additional Let’s Talk days/times offered throughout the week.

Let’s Talk is especially helpful for students who:

Have a specific concern and would like to consult with someone about it. Would like on-the-spot consultation rather than ongoing counseling. Would like to consult with a CS staff member about what actual therapy looks like. Would like to meet with one of our CS identity-based specialists. Have a concern about a friend or family member and would like some ideas about what to do.

How does Let’s Talk work?

Let’s Talk will be offered via Zoom and/or in satellite locations across campus. As a drop-in service, there is no need to schedule an appointment and no paperwork to be completed. Students are seen individually on a first-come, first-served basis at the times listed below. There may be a wait in the Zoom waiting room if the Let’s Talk staff member is meeting with another student. Please wait and we will be with you as soon as we can. Let’s Talk appointments are brief (usually between 15-30 minutes) and are meant to be used on an as-needed basis.

Nov 6
Let’s Talk – Wednesdays 2PM-4PM (BCC/Zoom) 2:00 p.m.

Meet with Counseling Services Cecile Gadson, who specializes in working with Black and African American students, at the Black Cultural Center. Let’s Talk is a service...
Let’s Talk – Wednesdays 2PM-4PM (BCC/Zoom)
October 16–December 11
2:00–4:00 p.m.

Meet with Counseling Services Cecile Gadson, who specializes in working with Black and African American students, at the Black Cultural Center.

Let’s Talk is a service that provides easy access to free, informal, and confidential one-on-one consultation with a Counseling Services staff member. See our website for six additional Let’s Talk days/times offered throughout the week.

Let’s Talk is especially helpful for students who:

Have a specific concern and would like to consult with someone about it. Would like on-the-spot consultation rather than ongoing counseling. Would like to consult with a CS staff member about what actual therapy looks like. Would like to meet with one of our CS identity-based specialists. Have a concern about a friend or family member and would like some ideas about what to do.

 

How does Let’s Talk work?

Let’s Talk will be offered via Zoom and/or in satellite locations across campus. As a drop-in service, there is no need to schedule an appointment and no paperwork to be completed. Students are seen individually on a first-come, first-served basis at the times listed below. There may be a wait in the Zoom waiting room if the Let’s Talk staff member is meeting with another student. Please wait and we will be with you as soon as we can. Let’s Talk appointments are brief (usually between 15-30 minutes) and are meant to be used on an as-needed basis.

Nov 7
Courageous Civility with Shola Richards 2:00 p.m.

Open and free to all faculty and staff at the University of Oregon with valid UO ID. Best-selling author Shola Richards, founder and CEO of Go Together Global, is leading...
Courageous Civility with Shola Richards
November 7
2:00–4:00 p.m.
Erb Memorial Union (EMU) Ballroom

Open and free to all faculty and staff at the University of Oregon with valid UO ID.

Best-selling author Shola Richards, founder and CEO of Go Together Global, is leading a worldwide movement to change the world based on how we treat each other at work. He has shared his transformative message with Fortune 50 companies, top universities, leading healthcare organizations, Silicon Valley, the motion picture industry, on the TEDx stage, and with Congress.

At this event, Richards will share insights from his three books—Go Together, Making Work Work, and Civil Unity—and provide the audience with tools, strategies, and information necessary to create a culture of equity, diversity, and belonging.

This keynote is ideal for individual contributors, leaders, and teams who are:

Ready to create a culture of equity, diversity and belonging, but don’t know where to begin. Concerned about the current climate of divisiveness in America, and its impact on marginalized communities’ mental health, safety and overall well-being. Unaware of how to effectively engage in difficult conversations with colleagues and others about bias and inequities.

The audience will leave with:

Strategies to recognize bias, prejudice, and/or microaggressions in the workplace, and how to address it immediately and strategically. Powerful data that shows that diverse teams are better at making decisions, more attractive to potential clients, consistently outperform competitors (and more!) The education and the inspiration to stay committed to the ongoing work of equity, diversity and belonging.

More about Shola

Shola Richards is an in-demand workplace civility expert and a prolific writer with a passionate worldwide following. His articles and wildly popular Monday morning "Go Together Movement" email series have impacted people in more than 160 countries, and his work has been featured on the Today Show, CBS This Morning, Forbes, Black Enterprise, Complete Wellbeing India, Business Insider Australia, and in numerous other outlets all over the world who recognize him as an authority on workplace happiness and engagement.

He is also a father, husband, identical twin, and a self-professed “kindness extremist,” who says he will not rest until bullying and incivility are extinct from the American workplace.

Event sponsored by the Lundquist College of Business, School of Journalism and Communication, College of Design, College of Arts and Sciences, School of Law, School of Music and Dance, Clark Honors College, and the Central Business Services Office (Office of the Provost).

Nov 7
Brian Walters, "Cicero's Republican Aratea" 4:00 p.m.

Before he had delivered his first speech in the Forum, Cicero was known to Rome’s literary elite as the young poet who first translated the Phaenomena of Aratus into...
Brian Walters, "Cicero's Republican Aratea"
November 7
4:00–5:30 p.m.
Knight Library Browsing Room

Before he had delivered his first speech in the Forum, Cicero was known to Rome’s literary elite as the young poet who first translated the Phaenomena of Aratus into Latin. My talk explores Cicero’s Aratea as a foundational masterpiece of first-century poetry and traces its engagements with earlier Latin epic and moralizing traditions.

Brian Walters is an Associate Professor of Classics at the University of Illinois, at Urbana-Champaign. In addition to a translation of Lucan’s Civil War (Hackett 2015), he has written a book on violent metaphors in Cicero and late-republican oratory, The Deaths of the Republic: Imagery of the Body Politic in Ciceronian Rome (Oxford 2020). He is currently working on a book on Cicero’s poetry.

Nov 7
Post-Election Roundtable 5:30 p.m.

Election takeaways and discussion of what comes next with a panel of election experts featuring Rep. Peter DeFazio and University of Oregon professors Alison Gash, Chandler James,...
Post-Election Roundtable
November 7
5:30–7:00 p.m.
Ford Alumni Center Giustina Ballroom

Election takeaways and discussion of what comes next with a panel of election experts featuring Rep. Peter DeFazio and University of Oregon professors Alison Gash, Chandler James, Regina Lawrence, Neil O’Brian and Daniel Tichenor. Sponsored by the Wayne Morse Center for Law and Politics.

Watch the livestream

Sponsored by the Wayne Morse Center for Law and Politics.

 

Nov 7
Women in Economics Club 6:00 p.m.

Join the UO Women in Economics Club at our weekly meeting! We host faculty talks and guest lectures, provide career development opportunities, as well as peer support. All are...
Women in Economics Club
October 10–September 18
6:00–7:00 p.m.
Allen Hall 140

Join the UO Women in Economics Club at our weekly meeting! We host faculty talks and guest lectures, provide career development opportunities, as well as peer support. All are welcome, regardless of major, minor, or gender identity!

The UO Women in Economics Club (WiE) was established in 2023 to support and meet the unique needs of women and gender-diverse individuals in the male-dominated economics field. WiE strives to build community, empower, and increase participation in economics through academic and social events. The club hosts guest speakers, roundtable discussions, professional development workshops, and more. Students undergraduate through PhD are welcome.

Meetings: Thursdays from 6-7pm in Allen 140. Hope to see you there!

Nov 8
Human Physiology Seminar Speaker: "Contribution of Aged CD8+ T Cells to Cardiovascular and Neurodegenerative Disease" with Daniel Tyrrell, PhD 10:00 a.m.

Daniel Tyrrell, PhD Assistant Professor, Molecular and Cellular Pathology The University of Alabama at Birmingham Contribution of Aged CD8+ T Cells to Cardiovascular and...
Human Physiology Seminar Speaker: "Contribution of Aged CD8+ T Cells to Cardiovascular and Neurodegenerative Disease" with Daniel Tyrrell, PhD
November 8
10:00–11:30 a.m.
Lawrence Hall 115

Daniel Tyrrell, PhD

Assistant Professor, Molecular and Cellular Pathology

The University of Alabama at Birmingham

Contribution of Aged CD8+ T Cells to Cardiovascular and Neurodegenerative Disease

Nov 8
The Inaugural Ring Lecture noon

Join us for a reception with light catering, brief presentations by the School of Global Studies and Languages faculty, and a discussion. Presenters: Andre Djiffack - African...
The Inaugural Ring Lecture
November 8
noon
Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA)

Join us for a reception with light catering, brief presentations by the School of Global Studies and Languages faculty, and a discussion.

Presenters:

Andre Djiffack - African dystopian Brain Drain.

Yosa Vidal - Utopias in Recent South American Feminist Narratives

 

Sponsored by the GSL and JSMA.

All are invited to tour "Necroarchivos de las Americas. An Unrelenting Search for Justice" during museum hours. 

Nov 8
"How Market Fundamentalism Has Blocked Climate Action" with Naomi Oreskes 1:00 p.m.

During this engaging talk, Naomi Oreskes, Harvard professor and co-author of Merchants of Doubt, will discuss how climate change denial has been rooted in market...
"How Market Fundamentalism Has Blocked Climate Action" with Naomi Oreskes
November 8
1:00–3:00 p.m.
Erb Memorial Union (EMU) 214 Redwood Auditorium

During this engaging talk, Naomi Oreskes, Harvard professor and co-author of Merchants of Doubt, will discuss how climate change denial has been rooted in market fundamentalism—the belief that government action in the marketplace threatens personal freedom and puts us on the “road to serfdom.” Despite hundreds of scientific reports, thousands of peer-reviewed articles, and a near unanimous consensus among climate scientists, political and social action has been inadequate to address the unfolding crisis. She’ll discuss how American business interests cultured, advanced, and sustained market fundamentalism and how this political ideology continues to be a major force blocking climate (and other important political) action today.

About the Speaker Naomi Oreskes is a world-renowned earth scientist, historian, and public speaker. She is the Henry Charles Lea Professor of the History of Science and Affiliated Professor of Earth and Planetary Sciences at Harvard University. She co-authored the best-selling book Merchants of Doubt (2010) with Erik Conway, and she is a leading voice on the role of science in society, the reality of anthropogenic climate change, and the role of disinformation in blocking climate action. Her new book, with Conway, is The Big Myth: How American Business Taught Us to Loathe Government and Love the Free Market.

About the Event Hosted by the SOJC’s Center for Science Communication Researchin partnership with the Institute for Resilient Organizations, Communities, and Environments; the Oregon Humanities Center; and the UO Environmental Studies program, this lecture is part of the this lecture is part of the SOJC Hearst Visiting Professionals Lecture series, with additional support provided by the Robert B. Frazier Distinguished Lecture in Journalism Writing fund.