Ryan Barland, Kristine Elias, Marria Thompson and Carolyn Tillman will give presentations at Thursday’s Graduate Student Forum.
Students also will discuss the writing process. Everyone is welcome.
Food service will celebrate more than 50 years of dining in Murray Hall/Murray-Herrick Campus Center on Tuesday, Dec. 20.
“Articulated” is the story of a young woman who finds herself facing challenging elements behind forgiveness, confrontation and commitment.
Father Erich Rutten of Campus Ministry and Father Michael Becker of St. John Vianney Seminary are featured speakers at this evening meal and presentation of short reflections.
English faculty members Liz Wilkinson and Andy Scheiber team up to produce a homegrown sound.
The Mass will be celebrated Monday, Dec. 12, in the Chapel of St. Thomas Aquinas.
The dance is free and open to the public.
Doors to Scooter’s will open at 2 p.m. for the 2:30 p.m. kickoff.
PULSE, a UST student group with a common interest in performance art, invites everyone to its free semiannual show. The first 100 guests will receive a PULSE Superfan T-shirt.
The day is a Holy Day of Obligation for Catholics.
Enjoy concerts by the Instrumental Jazz and Jazz Singers, the Guitar Ensemble, and the Symphonic Band and String Orchestra as well as two student recitals. All events are free.
Take a stress-relieving classical music break from 2 to 2:30 p.m.
This documentary is a timely and comprehensive exploration of physical and emotional abuse in society.
Father Erich Rutten of Campus Ministry and Father Michael Becker of St. John Vianney Seminary are featured speakers at this evening meal and presentation of short reflections.
Campus Ministry offers candy and information to celebrate St. Nicholas’ feast day.
Students and faculty will read from their favorite holiday works or some of their own. Want to read?
The McNair program, now beginning its fifth year at St. Thomas, encourages undergraduates to pursue Ph.D.s.
This is the third in a series of “Hot Topics: Cool Talk” programs that promote the civil discourse of important political topics.
The question that will be taken up concerns how the Catholic Church should respond to contemporary culture.
The Dance Club’s four teams will perform two dances each, with styles ranging from lyrical to jazz to hip-hop.
The concert will include music by Antonio Vivaldi and jazz great Oscar Pettiford, as well some Gypsy and Brazilian favorites.
In line with UST’s commitment to the integration of knowledge across disciplines, the series features a professor from a different department each week giving a brief talk on his or her discipline.
Comedy, music and more – the event will feature performances by Tou Ger Xiong, Pong Vang, Cody Lee and talented UST students. Authentic Hmong food will be served.
The dinner will serve guests from the Dorothy Day Homeless Shelter on Dec. 3.