On Tuesday, the Heyman Center hosted guest lecturer Dr. Mijin Cha to discuss the importance of power, organization, and framing in the battle for worldwide decarbonization.
This week’s events include a faculty roundtable, a climate science colloquium, film screenings, Dog Therapy with Alice! and Active Minds, Latin Jazz Night, and the Dr. Saul and Dorothy Kit Noir Film Festival!
Forcing students to take tests about things they don’t believe in is an unacceptable form of compelled speech.
Welcome back to Science Fair, Bwog’s weekly roundup of science events happening around campus. As always, email science@bwog.com if you want your event featured.
On Monday, The Center for Science and Society tackled the topic weighing on everyone’s minds: Dust.
Between Minneapolis and Moscow, there’s been a lot of discussion lately.
Saturday Daily Editor Lauren Kahme attended a presentation called “Inventing the Future: Zero Carbon Fuels and Climate Restoration” on Friday morning and learned about innovations in carbon reduction.
Bwog’s Saturday Daily Editor, Lauren Kahme, attends a roundtable discussion on the rapid climate change occurring on the Tibetan Plateau, a massive region of land in Central and East Asia categorized by its high elevation.
On Tuesday, the Institute for Religion, Culture & Public Life presented the third part of its yearlong series, Apocalypse Now: End Time and the Contemporary Imaginary. Seated in front of a small audience old enough to remember the first global climate shift, Wallace S. Broecker (aka the “Grandfather of Climate Science”) expertly addressed just how […]
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