Black Pop-Up Market
Higgins Atrium, Dana Commons, 2nd FloorSupport local Black businesses, entrepreneurs, and creatives, who will be on campus to sell food, artwork, photography, jewelry, and other handicrafts.
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Support local Black businesses, entrepreneurs, and creatives, who will be on campus to sell food, artwork, photography, jewelry, and other handicrafts.
Join the Clark Black Alumni Association (CBAA) and Alumni & Friends Virtual Book Club to celebrate Black History Month with a discussion of “The Warmth of Other Suns” by Isabel Wilkerson.
The CEV Speaker Series presents Sha-Asia Medina, director of The Village — an Afrocentric cultural, learning, and healing center in the Main South neighborhood.
Hear from a virtual panel of accomplished Black tech industry professionals at this in-person event.
The Mosakowski Institute for Public Enterprise invites Black students, faculty, and staff to participate in this collective healing experience. Register by Feb. 10.
Support local Black businesses, entrepreneurs, and creatives, who will be on campus to sell food, artwork, photography, jewelry, and other handicrafts.
Support local Black businesses, entrepreneurs, and creatives, who will be on campus to sell food, artwork, photography, jewelry, and other handicrafts.
Honor the past and celebrate the futures of former and present Black students at this panel discussion featuring Black alumni from a range of graduation years.
The Black Student Union, with the Office of Diversity and Inclusion and the Caribbean African Student Association, is sponsoring their first Black History Month Ball — BlackExcellence. Formal attire requested.
Black Alumni Homecoming Weekend concludes with a special brunch featuring traditional soul food favorites, live music, and the chance to mix and mingle with students, faculty, staff, and alumni.
“Black Panther” highlights Afrofuturism, a cultural aesthetic that combines science-fiction, history, and fantasy to explore the African American experience and connect those from the Black diaspora with their forgotten African ancestry.
A faculty and student panel will examine the concept of Afrofuturism as depicted in “Black Panther” and “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever.” The films will be screened at Clark on Feb. 28 and March 1.