7:30–9:30 p.m.
An indoor soccer field somewhere in suburban America. A team of high school age girls. Winter. Saturdays. Playwright Sarah DeLappe invites an audience into the warm-up circle along with nine young women who tackle big life questions while they joke, stretch, train, and play. [Ages 13+ for strong language and adult themes.]
THE WOLVES by Sarah deLappe Directed by Tricia Rodley Opening night: January 27th 7:30 pm January 28. February 3, 4, 10, 11 @ 7:30 pm Matinee: February 5 @ 2:00 pm
Doors open an hour before the show, no late seating.
“The Wolves” is presented by arrangement with Concord Theatricals on behalf of Samuel French, Inc. www.concordtheatricals.com
2:00–4:00 p.m.
An indoor soccer field somewhere in suburban America. A team of high school age girls. Winter. Saturdays. Playwright Sarah DeLappe invites an audience into the warm-up circle along with nine young women who tackle big life questions while they joke, stretch, train, and play. [Ages 13+ for strong language and adult themes.]
THE WOLVES by Sarah deLappe Directed by Tricia Rodley Opening night: January 27th 7:30 pm January 28. February 3, 4, 10, 11 @ 7:30 pm Matinee: February 5 @ 2:00 pm
Doors open an hour before the show, no late seating.
“The Wolves” is presented by arrangement with Concord Theatricals on behalf of Samuel French, Inc. www.concordtheatricals.com
noon
Meet with Counseling Services Mariko Lin at the Center for Multicultural Academic Excellence (Oregon Hall-Room 130) or click here: https://zoom.us/j/99147472563
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.
Click here for Let's Talk – Tuesday noon 2PM or see Mariko at the Center for Multicultural Academic Excellence (Oregon Hall-Room 130):
3:30–5:00 p.m.
Join us for Winter Colloquium! series:
Jan. 17 Job Talk #1, Job Talk #2 on Jan 19 Jan. 24 Dr. Spike Gildea, UO Linguistics Jan. 31 Dr. Marianne Mithun, UC Santa Barbara Feb. 7 Job Talk #3 Feb. 14 Dr. Caitlin Fausey, UO Psychology Feb. 21 Dr. Florian Matter, UO Linguistics Feb. 28 Dr. Lina Hou, UC Santa Barbara Mar. 7 Dr. Gabriela Perez Baez, UO Linguistics
3:30–5:00 p.m.
Lecture by Stephen Dueppen, Anthropology, University of Oregon
Cities emerged in the first millennium BC in the Inland Niger Delta of Mali, but the regional cultural and economic settings within which they developed are not well understood. Archaeological research in the Mouhoun Bend region of neighboring Burkina Faso spanning the first millennium BC and early first millennium AD indicates that interconnected networks of farming settlements were well-established in the greater region in the period prior to and during urban growth. This presentation will examine the social, religious, economic and political data from archaeological excavations in the Mouhoun Bend to provide new perspectives on the intercultural setting that enabled and shaped the more well-known urban societies in Mali. It suggests that understanding deeper histories throughout the region, including the development of possible marketplace nodes, provides new insights into the first millennium BC origins of urbanism.
5:30 p.m.
Cartoonist Keith Knight takes a deep dive on 20 artists who inspired him to use his art to address social issues. Folks like Ollie Harrington, Langston Hughes, Octavia Butler, Oscar Michaux, James Baldwin, alongside current artists like Dread Scott, Public Enemy, and Fly.
Keith Knight is a cartoonist and author of the comic strips The K Chronicles, (Th)ink, and The Knight Life. As a public speaker, Knight presents comic strip slideshows addressing racial illiteracy and police brutality and the role it has played since the early years of the United States. He is a co-creator and co-writer of Hulu’s streaming series Woke, based on The K Chronicles and Knight’s life. Knight is part of a generation of African-American artists who were raised on hip-hop, and infuse their work with urgency, edge, humor, satire, politics, and race. His art has appeared in various publications, including the New Yorker, the Washington Post, Daily KOS, San Francisco Chronicle, Medium.com, Ebony, ESPN the Magazine, L.A. Weekly, MAD Magazine, and the Funny Times.
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.
3:00–5:00 p.m.
Meet with Counseling Services Carolyn Meiller, who specializes in working with LGBTQ students, at Peterson 203 or click here: https://zoom.us/j/92314812010
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.
Click here for Let's Talk - Wednesday 3-5PM or see Carolyn at Peterson 203:
3:30–4:15 p.m.
Join an information session to learn more about this three-week summer program. Led by a faculty member in the Department of the History of Art and Architecture, students will be immersed in the global and culturally vibrant metropolis of London. Explore the city’s most exciting art, architecture, and design developments through art historical contextualization, current critical debates, and curatorial considerations.
Visit the program website at geo.uoregon.edu/art-and-architecture-london
4:00–5:00 p.m.
Join an info session to learn about the Creative Writing in Tuscany program taking place summer 2023. This program will transport a traditional creative writing fiction workshop and seminar examining the literature of Italy to the settings of Siena and Florence.
This program is open to all majors who have completed the prerequisite classes.
Visit the program website: https://geo.uoregon.edu/programs/europe-italy/creative-writing-tuscany