Veteran TV producer Wenda Fong, who was appointed to the California State University Board of Trustees in 2018, visited the CSUSB campus on Nov. 7.
The use of Native American mascots will be the focus of a talk by Native American activist, artist, educator and lecturer Charlene Teters on Nov. 12.
What does it mean to be a California artist? Find out at RAFFMA’s Artists in Conversation panel on Nov. 14, which will feature artists from the museum’s current exhibit, Made in California.
The Nov. 15 event will run from 4-7 p.m. in the CSUSB College of Education’s atrium and the Literacy Center, located in room CE-119, and is free to all ages.
The 2019 Best Chapter Award from the Phi Alpha Theta National History Honor Society also is the fifth award overall received by CSUSB students for their work.
“China and the Uyghur Muslims: A Human and Cultural Genocide,” presented by the CSUSB Center for Islamic & Middle Eastern Studies, is set for 6 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 12, at the College of Education, room CE-105.
Three recent CSUSB graduates are finalists in the 29th CSU Media Arts Festival, which gives students a chance to screen their work for peers and professionals.
The College of Arts and Letters hosted its Faculty Colloquium on Nov. 4, and featured Tom McGovern (art; chair of World Languages & Literatures), Gretchen Bergquist (communication studies), and Jasmine Lee (English).