Upcoming Events

03
Apr

MFA Thesis Exhibition: Hamish Jackson & Andrew McAllister

Arts/Entertainment

Reception on April 6 from 5-7PM

Hamish Jackson:
Tea Time with the Devil began with the hypothesis that I could create a diverse palette of glazes from one local material. I chose to base my experiments on a granite from Devil’s Playground in western Utah. I collected its bones, hauled them back to USU and crushed them into powder. Each glaze contains at least 50% of the Devil’s granite.This palette resulted from much trial and error — mostly error. Between 2020 and 2023, I ran thousands of glaze tests to formulate and hone these surfaces.

Why this place and material?
The wild landscape of Devil’s Playground captured my imagination and made me want to keep returning. I am truly grateful to this landscape and its rocks. The granite contains a high percentage of silica, as well as some feldspar and mica. Once powdered, it melts into a celadon glaze without adulteration. This was a good starting point: a blank (albeit grey) canvas for experiments.

Why tea wares?
As an Englishman and a walking stereotype, I love tea. Tea brings people together. By sharing tea, we make time to stop, reflect and connect. I am fascinated by the world’s diverse tea traditions and their accompanying ceramic tools. Tea Time with the Devil is inspired by the distinct tea traditions of England, Japan, China, and the American South.

9:00 am - 5:00 pm | Chase Fine Arts Center, Tippetts and Eccles Galleries |
03
Apr

Women and Gender Resource Connection Hour

Information/Orientation

Interested in learning more about resources available through the Women and Gender Program or Inclusion Center? Want help getting connected to our partners like CAPS, SAAVI, Financial Aid, Outdoor Rec, and more? Stop by TSC 315 Mondays at 1 pm for more info!

1:00 pm - 2:00 pm | Taggart Student Center |
03
Apr

LU'AU Tangata O Te Moana Nui | "People of the Great Ocean" | Student Night

Student Activities

Enjoy a night of live entertainment, fire dance, culture, and more! Tickets are sold at the Card Office (TSC 212).

7:00 pm - 10:00 pm | Taggart Student Center |
03
Apr

USU Percussion Ensembles

Arts/Entertainment

Join the USU Percussion Ensembles as they perform music from many genres, including Djembe drumming from West Africa and a transcription of a progressive rock song.

This concert will also be livestreamed on the CCA YouTube channel (@cainecollegeofthearts).

7:30 pm - 9:00 pm | Chase Fine Arts Center, Daines Concert Hall |
04
Apr

MFA Thesis Exhibition: Hamish Jackson & Andrew McAllister

Arts/Entertainment

Reception on April 6 from 5-7PM

Hamish Jackson:
Tea Time with the Devil began with the hypothesis that I could create a diverse palette of glazes from one local material. I chose to base my experiments on a granite from Devil’s Playground in western Utah. I collected its bones, hauled them back to USU and crushed them into powder. Each glaze contains at least 50% of the Devil’s granite.This palette resulted from much trial and error — mostly error. Between 2020 and 2023, I ran thousands of glaze tests to formulate and hone these surfaces.

Why this place and material?
The wild landscape of Devil’s Playground captured my imagination and made me want to keep returning. I am truly grateful to this landscape and its rocks. The granite contains a high percentage of silica, as well as some feldspar and mica. Once powdered, it melts into a celadon glaze without adulteration. This was a good starting point: a blank (albeit grey) canvas for experiments.

Why tea wares?
As an Englishman and a walking stereotype, I love tea. Tea brings people together. By sharing tea, we make time to stop, reflect and connect. I am fascinated by the world’s diverse tea traditions and their accompanying ceramic tools. Tea Time with the Devil is inspired by the distinct tea traditions of England, Japan, China, and the American South.

9:00 am - 5:00 pm | Chase Fine Arts Center, Tippetts and Eccles Galleries |
04
Apr

The impact of Trauma on your body

Workshop/Training

This one hour workshop will discuss how trauma impacts the body and discuss what that means for trauma survivors. This workshop will also discuss basic coping and resrouces for seeking treatment.

11:30 am - 12:30 pm | Online/Virtual |
04
Apr

Advancing Women Through “Developmental Relationships”: A Dialogue with Global Experts

Panel Discussion/Presentation

The Utah Women & Leadership Project invites you to join us for this Spring Women’s Leadership Forum.

Over the past 40 years, research has shown that “developmental relationships” facilitate career success, particularly for leaders. In addition, multiple developers (e.g., mentors, sponsors, or peers) enhance individuals’ learning, growth, and advancement. Globally recognized experts, Drs. Murphy and Kram have studied leadership, identity, and positive relationships at work to provide a foundation for understanding how to advance women through developmental relationships. In an interactive discussion with Dr. Susan R. Madsen, they will talk about five specific types of developmental relationships that are critical for developing women leaders: mentors, sponsors, peers, executive coaches, and learning partners. These relationships provide a range of supportive functions that both challenge and enable women to learn and thrive as they advance. The discussion will also cover strategies for individual women crafting these developmental relationships and ways that organizations can create and sustain a climate that fosters these connections.

Free - Register Online in Advance

12:00 pm - 1:15 pm | Online/Virtual |
04
Apr

Research Poster Session

Exhibition

Join us for this annual event where students showcase their research and compete for prizes. All engineering students are welcome to participate. Click the link below to submit your poster abstract online. Abstracts due by March 17.

1:00 pm - 5:00 pm | Engineering Building |
04
Apr

ENVS Spring Seminar - Gustavo Ovando-Montejo

Conference/Seminar

Urban Sprawl and Urban Configuration: Insights and Perspectives Using GIS and Landscape Ecology Gustavo Ovando-Montejo, Assistant Professor, ENVS

1:30 pm - 2:30 pm | Distance Education Building |
04
Apr

USU Tooele Campus Tours

Information/Orientation

Join our local Admissions Specialist Mike Booth for tours of the USU Tooele campus facilities and to learn more about college in Tooele. Tours last approximately 30-40 minutes and all guests will receive free Aggie Ice Cream on providing contact information for the university. Tours may be given offered the main building or the Science and Technology Building depending on timing and building availability.

5:00 pm - 7:00 pm |
04
Apr

Caine Ensembles

Arts/Entertainment

TBA

This event will be livestreamed on the CCA YouTube channel.

7:30 pm - 9:00 pm | Russell/Wanlass Performance Hall |
05
Apr

Start by Believing Day

Special Event

Visit a pledge booth across the state on this day to learn how to respond to a survivor when they disclose their experience to you. Then, take the pledge to start by believing; making a personal commitment to respond to a survivor with belief and empathy, support that survivor on their road to justice and healing, and to end the silence and stop the cycle of violence within our communities. You can also take the pledge online throughout the month at startbybelieving.usu.edu and be sure to use the campaign hashtag #USUbelieves so we can track the number of pledges USU takes.

9:00 am - 3:00 pm |
05
Apr

MFA Thesis Exhibition: Hamish Jackson & Andrew McAllister

Arts/Entertainment

Reception on April 6 from 5-7PM

Hamish Jackson:
Tea Time with the Devil began with the hypothesis that I could create a diverse palette of glazes from one local material. I chose to base my experiments on a granite from Devil’s Playground in western Utah. I collected its bones, hauled them back to USU and crushed them into powder. Each glaze contains at least 50% of the Devil’s granite.This palette resulted from much trial and error — mostly error. Between 2020 and 2023, I ran thousands of glaze tests to formulate and hone these surfaces.

Why this place and material?
The wild landscape of Devil’s Playground captured my imagination and made me want to keep returning. I am truly grateful to this landscape and its rocks. The granite contains a high percentage of silica, as well as some feldspar and mica. Once powdered, it melts into a celadon glaze without adulteration. This was a good starting point: a blank (albeit grey) canvas for experiments.

Why tea wares?
As an Englishman and a walking stereotype, I love tea. Tea brings people together. By sharing tea, we make time to stop, reflect and connect. I am fascinated by the world’s diverse tea traditions and their accompanying ceramic tools. Tea Time with the Devil is inspired by the distinct tea traditions of England, Japan, China, and the American South.

9:00 am - 5:00 pm | Chase Fine Arts Center, Tippetts and Eccles Galleries |
05
Apr

QCNR Mid-Morning Mingle

Social/Networking

Come to the NR atrium. $1 for a beverage and a pastry ... free beverage for students. All proceeds from the Mid-Morning Mingle go to a rotations of student clubs supporting the event. Coffee, tea, hot chocolate and treats will be served.

10:00 am - 10:45 am | Natural Resources Building |
05
Apr

Free Webinar: PopEquus-A tool for modeling wild horse population response to management

Conference/Seminar

The Free Roaming Equid and Ecosystem Sustainability network will host a public webinar to demonstrate PopEquus and answer questions about the model. The webinar will feature scientists from the USGS and BLM who helped develop the tool.

10:00 am - 11:00 am |
05
Apr

MBA Virtual Information Session

Information/Orientation | Student Recruiting

This virtual information session is available to anyone interested in pursuing an MBA or learning what an MBA can do for you. We will cover general information, frequently asked questions, and have the MBA team answer any additional questions you may have. Please RSVP to attend. We look forward to seeing you there!

12:00 pm - 1:00 pm | Online/Virtual |
05
Apr

Getting in Touch

Workshop/Training

How can mindfulness improve our sexual health? Physical intimacy with others and ourselves can be hindered by societal messages - but those aren't the restraints that should be present in our sexual exploration and lives. In this one-hour discussion, we will talk about the relationship between mindfulness and sexual health, and how being intentional, present, and compassionate may unlock a healthier relationship with our own bodies and deepen our connection with others.

1:30 pm - 2:30 pm | Online/Virtual |
05
Apr

Ecology Center Workshop: Introduction to Python for ArcPro Users

Workshop/Training

Please join us for our tenth coding workshop in our coding workshop series on Wednesday April 5th from 3:00 - 5:00 PM MT. This workshop is for folks have learned how to wrangle spatial data in ArcPro, and want to supplement their workflow with python.

3:00 pm - 5:00 pm | Natural Resources Building |
05
Apr

WILD Spring Seminar - Loreto Martinez de Baroja Villalón - Seed Dispersal by Corvids

Conference/Seminar

"How did these seeds arrive here and how did they leave? Seed dispersal by corvids." Loreto Martinez de Baroja Villalón, Margarita Salas Postdoctoral Fellow (University of Alacá), Department of Wildland Resources, Utah State University

4:00 pm - 5:00 pm | Life Sciences Building |
05
Apr

Start by Believing Day - Mix and Mingle

Fair/Festival

This event is hosted by CAPSA and USU to kick off Sexual Assault Awareness Month and recognize Start by Believing Day. We encourage you to stop by any time you are available between 4 PM and 6 PM to take the pledge and connect with your community.  At this event you will have the opportunity to engage with CAPSA’s Jill Anderson, USU SAAVI staff, and additional community leadership, learn more about Start by Believing and Sexual Assault Awareness Month, take photos with Big Blue and others, gather swag to wear throughout Sexual Assault Awareness Month

4:00 pm - 6:00 pm | TSC, International Lounge |
05
Apr

Engineering: Making a Difference While Making a Living

Panel Discussion/Presentation

Kim Shelley’s career has focused on Utah’s environmental priorities. As the Executive Director of the Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ), she leads with a vision of improving the health and quality of life of Utah residents through the administration of state and federal laws that protect Utah’s air, land and water. An engineer by training, Shelley has held various leadership roles within DEQ, most recently as the department’s deputy director. She was the assistant director of the Division of Water Quality and manager of the Surface Water Discharge Program, where she oversaw the permitting of complex wastewater projects. She was also previously appointed by former Gov. Gary Herbert to represent the state on the Colorado River Basin Salinity Control Forum and Advisory Council. Before she joined the Division of Water Quality, she worked in the Division of Environmental Response and Remediation’s underground storage tank program. In addition to her public sector experience, Shelley has worked in private industry as a research and development engineer. Shelley was raised in Salt Lake City and is a graduate of the University of Utah with a bachelor’s degree in Metallurgical Eng

5:30 pm - 6:30 pm | Engineering Building |
06
Apr

USU and U with Dr. Rick Woodford

Arts/Entertainment

Tune into USU and U this week as we hear from Dr. Rick Woodford from Uintah County District!

9:00 am - 9:30 am |
06
Apr

MFA Thesis Exhibition: Hamish Jackson & Andrew McAllister

Arts/Entertainment

Reception on April 6 from 5-7PM

Hamish Jackson:
Tea Time with the Devil began with the hypothesis that I could create a diverse palette of glazes from one local material. I chose to base my experiments on a granite from Devil’s Playground in western Utah. I collected its bones, hauled them back to USU and crushed them into powder. Each glaze contains at least 50% of the Devil’s granite.This palette resulted from much trial and error — mostly error. Between 2020 and 2023, I ran thousands of glaze tests to formulate and hone these surfaces.

Why this place and material?
The wild landscape of Devil’s Playground captured my imagination and made me want to keep returning. I am truly grateful to this landscape and its rocks. The granite contains a high percentage of silica, as well as some feldspar and mica. Once powdered, it melts into a celadon glaze without adulteration. This was a good starting point: a blank (albeit grey) canvas for experiments.

Why tea wares?
As an Englishman and a walking stereotype, I love tea. Tea brings people together. By sharing tea, we make time to stop, reflect and connect. I am fascinated by the world’s diverse tea traditions and their accompanying ceramic tools. Tea Time with the Devil is inspired by the distinct tea traditions of England, Japan, China, and the American South.

9:00 am - 5:00 pm | Chase Fine Arts Center, Tippetts and Eccles Galleries |
06
Apr

Signature Speaker

Cultural

Join us for our bi-annual signature speaker event where the Latinx Cultural Center invites an outstanding Latinx leader in the community to network with students and speak on their professional and personal experience. This year, Yudi Lewis, who was recently appointed as the director of the Office of Hispanic-Serving Institution Initiatives at Weber State University, will speak. With a solid track record of Latino recruitment and retention, Lewis aims to position Hispanic and Latino students strategically, helping them transition from high school to college, and subsequently into their desired fields. This event will be split into a networking session earlier in the day in the LCC, and a formal gathering where Yudi will provide a presentation.

10:00 am - 7:00 pm | Taggart Student Center |
06
Apr

WATS Spring Seminar - Sara Yeo - The Science of Communication

Conference/Seminar

A Seminar presented by Sara Yeo, Associate Professor, Department of Communication, University of Utah

4:30 pm - 5:30 pm | Natural Resources Building |
06
Apr

Communitas Lecture Series: Dan Hicks

Arts/Entertainment

Dan Hicks FSA, MCIfA (born 1972) is Professor of Contemporary Archaeology at the University of Oxford, Curator at the Pitt Rivers Museum, and a Fellow of St Cross College, Oxford. Dan works on the material and visual culture of the human past, up to and including the modern, colonial, contemporary and digital world, and on the history of Archaeology, Anthropology Art, and Architecture. His curatorial work has ranged widely, and most recently included the co-curated exhibition and book Lande: the Calais “Jungle” and Beyond in 2019.

5:00 pm - 6:00 pm | Russell/Wanlass Performance Hall |
06
Apr

'Sisters Rising' Film Screening

Special Event

SISTERS RISING is the story of six Native American women fighting to restore personal and tribal sovereignty in the face of ongoing sexual violence against Indigenous women in the United States.

This event is part of Sexual Assault Awareness Month.

5:00 pm - 7:00 pm | Utah State University Blanding Campus |
06
Apr

Future of the Great Salt Lake: Discussion and Q&A

Panel Discussion/Presentation

Presenters: Dr. Brian Steed, Executive Director of the Institute for Land, Water, and Air, and Dr. Patrick Belmont from the College of Natural Resources. FREE PIZZA

5:30 pm - 6:30 pm | David B. Haight Center |
06
Apr

Tanner Talk: Dr. Susan Stryker,Transgender History (LGBTQIA+ Health & History Series)

Panel Discussion/Presentation

Save the Date! Dr. Susan Stryker will present a public lecture on the history of transgender people in the United States, with particular material drawn from her foundational text, Transgender History (2008) as well as her forthcoming book, Changing Gender: Memoir, History, Manifesto.

6:00 pm - 7:30 pm | Eccles Conference Center Auditorium |
06
Apr

Utah Symphony: Florence Price Concerto

Arts/Entertainment

Discover groundbreaking African American composer Florence Price’s exquisite and romantic Piano Concerto—unearthed in recent years and championed by Michelle Cann, who gave its New York Philharmonic premiere and has since introduced it to audiences across the country. Then, hear how Shostakovich broke barriers with his Symphony No. 10, when he was finally free to express his unrestrained response to Stalin’s regime in an impassioned outpouring.

8:00 pm - 10:00 pm | Chase Fine Arts Center, Daines Concert Hall |
07
Apr

9th Annual Diversity Conference

Conference/Seminar | Inclusive Excellence

USU's Division of Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion's Center for Diversity & Inclusion at USU Eastern (Price, UT) will be hosting the 9th Annual Diversity Conference on Friday, April 7, 2023, from 8 AM to 4 PM in our Jennifer Leavitt Student Center and Geary Events Center. Our conference will be titled, "Alike or Different Together We Grow"

8:00 am - 4:00 pm | Utah State University Eastern Campus |
07
Apr

MFA Thesis Exhibition: Hamish Jackson & Andrew McAllister

Arts/Entertainment

Reception on April 6 from 5-7PM

Hamish Jackson:
Tea Time with the Devil began with the hypothesis that I could create a diverse palette of glazes from one local material. I chose to base my experiments on a granite from Devil’s Playground in western Utah. I collected its bones, hauled them back to USU and crushed them into powder. Each glaze contains at least 50% of the Devil’s granite.This palette resulted from much trial and error — mostly error. Between 2020 and 2023, I ran thousands of glaze tests to formulate and hone these surfaces.

Why this place and material?
The wild landscape of Devil’s Playground captured my imagination and made me want to keep returning. I am truly grateful to this landscape and its rocks. The granite contains a high percentage of silica, as well as some feldspar and mica. Once powdered, it melts into a celadon glaze without adulteration. This was a good starting point: a blank (albeit grey) canvas for experiments.

Why tea wares?
As an Englishman and a walking stereotype, I love tea. Tea brings people together. By sharing tea, we make time to stop, reflect and connect. I am fascinated by the world’s diverse tea traditions and their accompanying ceramic tools. Tea Time with the Devil is inspired by the distinct tea traditions of England, Japan, China, and the American South.

9:00 am - 5:00 pm | Chase Fine Arts Center, Tippetts and Eccles Galleries |
07
Apr

Ecology Ph.D. Defense: Umarfarooq Abdulwahab

Conference/Seminar

Developing empirical predictive models to support conservation planning for threatened frogs, toads, and turtles in South-Coastal California.

10:00 am - 11:00 am | USU Libraries |
07
Apr

Randy Quarles - Eccles Lecture

Panel Discussion/Presentation | Focused Friday

Randy Quarles, former Vice Chair of the Federal Reserve, delivers the George S. Eccles Distinguished Lecture in Economics.

10:30 am - 11:30 am | Eccles Conference Center Auditorium |
07
Apr

Research Week Award Ceremony

Ceremony/Awards/Celebration

The College of Engineering invites students, faculty, and staff to our annual Research Week Awards Ceremony.

11:30 am - 1:00 pm | Alumni Center |
07
Apr

Women in Welding Workshop

Workshop/Training

NOTE: This workshop is now full. We will be offering more workshops soon!

Over the course of four sessions, participants will learn how to set up
a welder for GMAW/FCAW, apply basic troubleshooting techniques,
use basic shop tools and machinery, and will be introduced to
entry-level fabrication techniques. Students will complete a small
project by the end of the course to take home with them.
We are excited to educate and support women in the trades, and hope
you will join us for lots of fun and real-world learning!

3:00 pm - 5:00 pm |
07
Apr

Live Band Karaoke

Student Activities

Come enjoy a karaoke night with a fun twist - all of the music is played by a live band! If you've always dreamed of being a real rock star and singing on the big stage, here's your chance at a your first big show! Everyone is welcome to come. While you're here, take part in a huge raffle where dozens of prizes will be raffled off to raise money for the Utah State University Music Therapy Student Association, including a ukulele and gift cards to tons of local businesses like Morty's and The Crepery!

5:00 pm - 8:00 pm |
07
Apr

USU Chamber Singers: Lads Among Sagebrush

Arts/Entertainment

This is a concert presented by a few students from the USU Chamber Singers. A fun night of celtic music and sea shanties, foot stomping, clapping, and fun! Free entry!

7:30 pm - 9:00 pm | Russell/Wanlass Performance Hall |
08
Apr

Fry Street Quartet with USU Strings and Alumni

Arts/Entertainment

The closing program in the season celebrating the Fry Street Quartet’s 20th anniversary at USU features collaborations with both current and former students of the USU string program. A highlight of this program is a commission for chamber orchestra by celebrated young composer and USU string program graduate Stephen Mitton. Stephen has written socially and environmentally conscious music for a wide variety of genres ranging from contemporary dance to full orchestra, and his works have received numerous awards.

This concert will be livestreamed on the CCA YouTube channel.

2:00 pm - 4:00 pm | Chase Fine Arts Center, Daines Concert Hall |
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