Women’s Tea
Higgins University Center, Tilton HallTo celebrate Women’s History Month, women from across campus are invited to join together for snacks, tea, giveaways, and a opportunity to give back to a women’s shelter in Worcester.
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To celebrate Women’s History Month, women from across campus are invited to join together for snacks, tea, giveaways, and a opportunity to give back to a women’s shelter in Worcester.
Scholar, author, and director Susan Stryker will present a talk drawn from her work in progress, “Changing Gender.”
Kathryn Abrams, Herma Hill Kay Distinguished Professor of Law and Faculty Director of the Center for Reproductive Rights and Justice at the UC Berkeley School of Law, will examine how are organizers are confronting post-Roe restrictions on reproductive rights in a talk at Clark University on Wednesday, March 20 at 1:30pm.
Local women-, femme-, or gender-diverse-led businesses, entrepreneurs, and creatives will be selling their wares — food, artwork, photography, jewelry, etc.
Top academic and varsity leaders will discuss how esports has grown across college campuses and share best practices on creating a thriving esports ecosystem.
Esports has permeated culture and is a now a must across Collegiate campuses. Come and hear from top Academic and Varsity leaders on how to Create and Grow an Esports Ecosystem on your campus.
Clark’s Diversity and Inclusion Book Club will be meeting in person following the Faculty Assembly meetings. All meetings will be at 5 pm in Higgins Fireside Lounge. Snacks, drinks, and […]
In honor of Women’s History Month, University Librarian Laura Robinson will lead the Alumni and Friends Virtual Book Club in a discussion of “Taste Makers: Seven Immigrant Women who Revolutionized Food in America” by Mayukh Sen.
In the Spring 2024 Harrington Public Affairs Lecture, Elizabeth Sharrow, associate professor at UMass Amherst, will explore the reasons why sex-based inequalities remain in college athletics and identify institutional perversions that undermine efforts toward equality.
The Higgins School of Humanities is hosting the Worcester premiere of “If You Become My Friend,” a documentary about frefugees who fled Afghanistan after the Taliban took control in 2021 and eventually resettled in Worcester.
Nozomi Nakaganeku Saito, an Uchinanchu scholar and postdoctoral fellow/visiting assistant professor in English at Amherst College, will examine these stories and the relationship between place and narrative to highlight the practice of everyday sovereignties in Okinawa’s Black District during a lecture for the Higgins School of Humanities on Monday, April 8 at 4:30pm ET in the Higgins Lounge at Dana Commons on the Clark University campus.