“Big Data and Big Promises,” by Sastry G. Pantula, dean of the College of Natural Sciences, is scheduled noon in the John M. Pfau Library multimedia center, PL 5005.
The museum, housed on the third floor of the College of Social and Behavioral Sciences, will display “smallasaGIANT” from April 15-June 15. CSUSB will serve as the exhibit’s debut. An opening reception is set for April 18.
“The House I Live In,” a documentary film that examines the profound human rights implications of U.S. drug policy, will be shown on April 4 at the John M. Pfau Library, PL-5005.
Presented by the Institute for Child Development and Family Relations, Elliott’s talk will take place in the Santos Manuel Student Union Events Center, and complements the Anthropology Museum exhibit “smallasaGIANT,” set to run April 15-June 15.
“How Not to Write History: Teaching Methodology Through Aliens, Conspiracies, and the Chinese Discovery of America,” will be presented by Chelsea Zi Wang, an assistant professor of history at Claremont McKenna College, on April 19.
Artist Ise Lyfe will formally open his exhibit, “smallasaGIANT,” at the Cal State San Bernardino Anthropology Museum beginning at 6 p.m. Thursday, April 18, marking its premiere.
The annual Latin American Studies Conference: Study of the Americas at Cal State San Bernardino on April 25-26 will explore Latinx politics, experiences and expressions in the United States and the U.S.-borderlands region.
Keynote speaker Gail C. Christopher tells audience: “My message this morning is summarized in three words: we deserve better.”
The hottest jobs in the country include genetic counseling, mathematicians and data scientists because they involve mathematics and data, said Sastry Pantula during his talk, “Big Data and Promises.”