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  • Change your world! Join us at the Education Abroad Fair to explore what off-campus opportunities are available for you. Several host organizations and returnees will answer any questions you may have regarding the programs. Office of Education Abroad staff also will be available to help with Cal Lutheran-specific inquiries. For a list of open programs, visit CalLutheran.edu/oea.

    This free event is open to the public. Sponsored by the Office of Education Abroad. For more information, call 805-493-3750 or email oea@CalLutheran.edu.

  • Each year the International Day of Peace is observed around the world. The U.N. General Assembly has declared Sept. 21 a day devoted to strengthening the ideals of peace by observing 24 hours of nonviolence and cease-fire.

    Join the Center for Global Engagement for a daylong celebration that will include a flag procession throughout campus, Peace Pole rededication near the Rose Garden, prayers and minute of silence near Samuelson Chapel, World Peace Expression in Kingsmen Park and more. To see the schedule of events, visit https://bit.ly/3PmBmXn.

    This free event is open to the public. Sponsored by the Center for Global Engagement. For more information, call 805-493-3750 or email global@CalLutheran.edu.
  • In 2003 and 2004, nine black women from the small midwestern city of Peoria, Illinois, either disappeared or their bodies were found discarded in rural areas surrounding the city. A local man eventually was convicted of killing eight of the women and is serving a life term in prison. In this talk, Black feminist scholar Terrion L. Williamson, PhD, JD, will discuss how this series of murders impacted her hometown and has continued to shape the course of her work almost 20 years later. She will use the Peoria case as an illustration of the need to place the lives of marginalized Black women and girls at the center of ongoing struggles for social justice and black liberation.

    Williamson researches and teaches in the areas of Black cultural studies, feminist theory, media studies, contemporary African American literature, midwestern studies and racialized gender violence. She serves as the director of the Black Midwest Initiative. Her current book project, We Cannot Live Without Our Lives, is a study of Black women and girls who have been the victims of serial murder throughout the industrial Midwest since the late 1990s.

    Admission is free. For more information, contact the College of Arts and Sciences at 805-493-3015 or coas@CalLutheran.edu.
  • “Flipping the Script” is a history lecture series that highlights people, groups or events in world history that are typically ignored or considered irrelevant in mainstream cultural narratives.

    In the first lecture, UC Davis history professor Andrés Reséndez, PhD, will discuss how, after a Genoese navigator brought the Atlantic World into existence in 1492, a similar “Columbian moment” occurred in the Pacific. Yes, Polynesian navigators first crossed the great ocean by island-hopping from the coast of China to the Americas; and yes, Magellan was the first European to go from the New World to Asia. But the first complete transpacific voyage — from America to Asia and back — occurred in 1564-65. Known only to a few specialists, this dramatic expedition finally turned the largest ocean on Earth into a vital space of human contact and exchange.

    Reséndez specializes in early European exploration and colonization of the Americas, the U.S-Mexico border region, and the early history of the Pacific, particularly the pioneering voyages of discovery and the biological exchanges across the largest ocean on Earth.

    The series will continue with:
    Nov. 10: Chris Kimball, PhD, “Breaking Baseball’s Color Line: Another Look”
    Dec. 1: David Nelson, PhD, “Japan’s Schindler: Sugihara Chiune and the Power of the Visa”
    Jan. 26: Michaela Reaves, PhD, “Making the World Safe for Democracy: World War I?”
    April 20: Samuel Claussen, PhD, “Hear Me Roar: Powerful, Violent Women of the Renaissance”

    This series is presented by the History Department faculty and other experts, focusing on different periods in world history. The series is sponsored by Cal Lutheran, the Thousand Oaks Grant R. Brimhall Library and Ventura County Library, and generously funded in part by a Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation grant. For information, contact David Nelson at dnelson@CalLutheran.edu.
  • Music Department students will celebrate homecoming weekend with an eclectic array of solo and chamber performances. This concert will highlight the musical abilities and achievements of our talented students.

    Admission is free. Donations will be accepted. For information, call the Music Department at 805-493-3306 or visit CalLutheran.edu/music.
  • Cal Lutheran celebrates the scholarly work of top undergraduates at this annual event. Students’ original findings, the product of full-time research under faculty mentors, are often presented at professional conferences and accepted for publication in peer-reviewed journals.

    Funding for more than 50 students has been provided by the Swenson Science Summer Research Fellowships, John Stauffer Research Fellowships in the Chemical Sciences, Culver Behavioral Science Fellowship, Fletcher Jones Fellowship, Pearson Scholars Summer Program for Leadership and Engagement in a Global Society, G.A. Foster Family Foundation, and Cal Lutheran.

    Students were also funded by the National Science Foundation, the U.S. Department of Education grant program ALLIES in STEM, and the Ronald E. McNair Postbaccalaureate Achievement Program.

    Admission is free. Sponsored by the Office of Undergraduate Research and Creative Scholarship.

    For information, email OURCS@CalLutheran.edu.
  • The Cal Lutheran Choir and Cielo (treble choir) open the season with one of their hallmark concerts, featuring an eclectic program of innovative and exciting contemporary choral music.

    Admission is free. Donations will be accepted. For information, call the Music Department at 805-493-3306 or visit CalLutheran.edu/music.
  • The CLU Wind Ensemble and the University String Symphony will each perform a wide variety of outstanding and diverse music, then join forces to close the performance with works for full symphony orchestra.

    Admission is free. Donations will be accepted. For information, call the Music Department at 805-493-3306 or visit CalLutheran.edu/music.



  • “Flipping the Script” is a history lecture series that highlights people, groups or events in world history that are typically ignored or considered irrelevant in mainstream cultural narratives.

    For the third lecture in the series, associate professor of history David Nelson, PhD, will discuss Sugihara Chiune (1900-86), the only Japanese national to be honored by Israel as one of the “Righteous Among the Nations.” Sugihara facilitated the emigration of Jewish Eastern Europeans after German and Soviet expansion following the 1939 invasion of Poland. As Vice-Consul stationed in Lithuania from 1939 until the day of his departure on September 4, 1940, Sugihara (ab)used his authority to issue visas for 2,000 to 5,000 Jewish refugees to travel through the Soviet Union to Japan, where most departed to their final destinations in the Americas, the British Commonwealth, and China.

    The series will continue with:
    Jan. 26: Michaela Reaves, PhD, “Making the World Safe for Democracy: World War I?”
    April 20: Samuel Claussen, PhD, “Hear Me Roar: Powerful, Violent Women of the Renaissance”

    This series is presented by the History Department faculty and other experts, focusing on different periods in world history. The series is sponsored by Cal Lutheran, the Thousand Oaks Grant R. Brimhall Library and Ventura County Library, and generously funded in part by a Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation grant. For information, contact David Nelson at dnelson@CalLutheran.edu.
  • The Cal Lutheran Choral Ensembles will join with student instrumentalists to present the annual Christmas Concerts. Welcome the season with a narrated performance of Christmas music guaranteed to put you in the holiday mood. As always, the program for this longest-running annual event will include delightful lesser-known carols as well as familiar favorites. Wyant Morton will conduct.

    These concerts are popular, so arrive early for convenient parking. Doors open one hour before the concerts.

    Friday, Dec. 2, 7:30 p.m.
    Saturday, Dec. 3, and Sunday, Dec. 4, 4 p.m.

    Tickets are $15 (free with Cal Lutheran ID) and must be purchased in advance. For tickets, visit cluchristmastickets.com, or for more information, call the Music Department at 805-493-3305 or visit CalLutheran.edu/music.
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