“Venice and the Mediterranean: Artistic Diplomacy and Portable Art and Architecture,” will be presented by Tatiana Sizonenko, art historian and curator, at 6 p.m. at the museum.
The spring quarter lectures begin April 2. The class meets from 4-5:50 p.m. and the community is invited to attend at no cost.
CSUSB’s John M. Pfau Library will host a talk, “We Carry the Border on our Bodies: Bridging and Maneuvering Immigration Status Barriers in U.S. and Canadian Postsecondary Education,” by Paloma E. Villegas, assistant professor of sociology.
“Taking a scientific approach to science education (and most other subjects)” will be the topic of Wieman’s talk, set for May 8 in the Jack H. Brown College of Business and Public Administration, room 102.
Sylvester James “Jim” Gates, a theoretical physicist and the Ford Foundation Physics Professor and Affiliate Mathematics Professor at Brown University, will present “Einstein v Robert” on May 20.
Physicist and Nobel Prize winner Carl Wieman from Stanford University presented his lecture, “Taking a scientific approach to science education (and most other subjects),” on May 8.
“From Bloodhounds to German Shepherds: The Racist History of Interspecies Policing in American History,” will be presented by Tyler Parry, an associate professor of history at Cal State Fullerton.
José M. Aguilar-Hernández, assistant professor from Cal Poly Pomona, will present on May 23, and Freddy Francisco Alvarez Jr., assistant professor from Portaland State University, will speak on May 29.
Sylvester James “Jim” Gates, a theoretical physicist and the Ford Foundation Physics Professor and Affiliate Mathematics Professor at Brown University, presented “Einstein v Robert,” which focused on why diversity makes excellent science.