“The Manchu Queue: A Complex Symbol in Chinese Identity,” on April 25, and “Ethnic River: Borderland Ecology and Rice Farming Stories around the Tumen River,” on April 27, are part of CSUSB’s Asian Pacific Islander Desi American Heritage Month celebration.
Brian Levin (criminal justice) comments on the Riverside County sheriff appearing at a campaign rally to be emceed by an extreme right-wing commentator.
The two separate rankings of the online criminal justice BA program and the online criminal justice MA program are the latest recognitions of the School of Criminology and Criminal Justice’s work.
CSUSB kinesiology student Evelyn Atencio and CSUSB psychology alumna Bianca Gonzalez are changing the lives of local youth through the nonprofit Big Brothers Big Sisters, which has led Atencio to win an award.
Mike Stull (entrepreneurship) is CSUSB’s 2021-22 Golden Apple Award recipient, research by Brian Levin (criminal justice) is cited, and Owen J.P. Murphy (computer science emeritus) wrote an opinion piece on the Russia-Ukraine war.
“Continent in Dust: Experiments in a Chinese Weather System,” on April 18, and “Mate Choice and Marriage in the Chinese Communist Border Areas: Three Perspectives from 1941-42,” on April 21, are part of CSUSB’s Asian Pacific Islander Desi American Heritage Month. Both programs are free and open to the public.
“Feeling Jewish: Nostalgia and American Jewish Religion” is the topic of the talk by religious studies scholar Rachel B. Gross. The annual Rabbi Hillel Cohn Endowed Lecture on the Contemporary Jewish Experience will take place virtually.
The team of 18 students, representing diverse academic and personal backgrounds, earned the Outstanding Delegation Award, the highest honor given by the National Model United Nations Conference. They represented the country of Cameroon in the annual conference held April 2-8 in New York City.
Villaseñor, who is known for his bestselling book, “Rain of Gold,” will speak at an in-person event that also will be available virtually.