Attention Collins College of Business graduate students! Whether you’re pursuing an MBA, M.S. in Business Analytics, Energy Business Management, or Finance, we want your input! Visit the GSA outreach table to voice your concerns, propose new ideas, and register for the December-January portfolio display. Enjoy seasonal treats and connect with GSA representatives who will convey your feedback to the administration. Make your voice heard and help shape the future of our business community!
Fall 2024
Quantum Computing with Dr. Brown
Kenneth Brown, Ph.D., distinguished professor at Duke University, will give a virtual talk on Quantum Computing-what it is, what it isn’t, its applications, and his research. Afterwards, there will be a Q&A Session, followed by break-out groups led by The University of Tulsa students to discuss Quantum Algorithms, Quantum Circuits, and the intersection of Quantum Computing and Artificial Intelligence. Undergraduates, Graduates, and Faculty are all welcome!
Event organized by Software Engineering Club at TU (SECTU), Society of Physics Students (SPS), AI/ML Club, and the Undergraduate Research Association (URA).
For questions about the event, contact Philip Rahal, SECTU President, at pjr4516@utulsa.edu
Exercise and Sports Science Club Lunch & Learn
Lunch and Learn with EXSS Club, our speaker is Josh Jackson is from Next Level Athletics, a sports performance training facility in Tulsa. Josh works with a variety of athletes to improve speed, agility and strength through group classes, team training and private lessons. Teams such as RSU Men’s soccer, Jenks Women’s basketball, Booker T Men’s soccer and Blitz Soccer academy train with Next Level Athletics.
TU Fall Film Festival 2024
A screening of submissions from the hard-working students of TU’s Film Department. Prior to the beginning of the screening, popcorn and live music by a string quartet will be in the lobby of the Lorton Performance Center. Free admittance for all ages, so join us for a night of celebrating film and the students of the film department!
Festival De Las Flores
It’s time for LASA’s Festival De Las Flores! Join us as we close out Hispanic Heritage Month with UTulsa’s annual festival Saturday, Oct. 12. Enjoy live music, performances, food trucks, a photo booth, crafts, and more!!
The first 200 UTulsa students will receive a free food truck ticket, and the first 100 UTulsa students will be automatically entered into a raffle to win prizes!!
Cowboy/western attire is encouraged. Students 21 and over be sure to bring your government-issued ID!
Homecoming Street Painting Competition
UTulsa students: Join this friendly competition (and favorite TU student tradition) by painting Tucker Drive to bring on the Hurricane Spirit!
Homecoming Bonfire Build 2024
UTulsa students: Help continue UTulsa’s most famous Homecoming tradition – our Bonfire celebration! Volunteers meet at Dietler Commons to build the bonfire and keep the legacy alive.
Homecoming Party with DJ Austin Millz
UTulsa students: Homecoming is here, and we are celebrating! Join us for a party with DJ Austin Millz. Free food and drink tickets will be available at the event for UTulsa students.
Pop-up Market
UTulsa students with consumer packaged goods businesses may set up shop and sell to individuals who come to campus. This event is open to students, faculty, staff, and the public.
HCAR Works-in-Progress Seminar: Shelby Johnson
Paper Title: “Transformational Flows in Anishinaabe Ecologies and Agokwe Futures”
HCAR welcomes you to join us for our October Works-in-Progress Seminar. Shelby Johnson will be presenting on a project that reflects some of her recent research into early Indigenous gender and sexuality studies – in this case, by speaking on an Anishinaabe guide named Ozaawindib, who was an agokwe. Assigned male by colonial writers but living as a woman in her community at Gaa-Miskwaawaakokaag (or Leech Lake), Ozaawindib’s agokwe personhood is routinely elided by American writers. In this work, Johnson seeks to trace pathways through and beyond settler reports of Ozaawindib with the writings of her Anishinaabe contemporary, Bamewawagezhikaquay, also known as Jane Johnston Schoolcraft. She argues that Bamewawagezhikaquay’s retellings of aadizookaanag, or sacred origin stories in “Origin of the Robin” and “Corn Story,” index a mode of transformable embodiment that exists through lived responsibilities to local ecologies, which she often figures in the seasonal growth patterns of plants and in the fluid dynamics of waterways. In her talk, Johnson hopes to engage with her coordination of transformable embodiment and gendered responsibility to reread settler archives for agokwe roles that disrupt the smooth unfolding of a colonial epistemic norm.
If you would like to attend and have access to the electronic copy of Dr. Johnson’s paper, please email william-smith@utulsa.edu.
About Works-In-Progress Seminars
These seminars nurture a community of local and regional scholars by providing opportunities to share creative activity in an academically constructive environment. Each seminar will focus on pre-circulated drafts followed by a roundtable conversation among participants.
Quantum Computing with Dr. Brown
Kenneth Brown, Ph.D., distinguished professor at Duke University, will give a virtual talk on Quantum Computing-what it is, what it isn’t, its applications, and his research. Afterwards, there will be a Q&A Session, followed by break-out groups led by The University of Tulsa students to discuss Quantum Algorithms, Quantum Circuits, and the intersection of Quantum Computing and Artificial Intelligence. Undergraduates, Graduates, and Faculty are all welcome!
Event organized by Software Engineering Club at TU (SECTU), Society of Physics Students (SPS), AI/ML Club, and the Undergraduate Research Association (URA).
For questions about the event, contact Philip Rahal, SECTU President, at pjr4516@utulsa.edu
Exercise and Sports Science Club Lunch & Learn
Lunch and Learn with EXSS Club, our speaker is Josh Jackson is from Next Level Athletics, a sports performance training facility in Tulsa. Josh works with a variety of athletes to improve speed, agility and strength through group classes, team training and private lessons. Teams such as RSU Men’s soccer, Jenks Women’s basketball, Booker T Men’s soccer and Blitz Soccer academy train with Next Level Athletics.
TU Fall Film Festival 2024
A screening of submissions from the hard-working students of TU’s Film Department. Prior to the beginning of the screening, popcorn and live music by a string quartet will be in the lobby of the Lorton Performance Center. Free admittance for all ages, so join us for a night of celebrating film and the students of the film department!
Festival De Las Flores
It’s time for LASA’s Festival De Las Flores! Join us as we close out Hispanic Heritage Month with UTulsa’s annual festival Saturday, Oct. 12. Enjoy live music, performances, food trucks, a photo booth, crafts, and more!!
The first 200 UTulsa students will receive a free food truck ticket, and the first 100 UTulsa students will be automatically entered into a raffle to win prizes!!
Cowboy/western attire is encouraged. Students 21 and over be sure to bring your government-issued ID!
Homecoming Street Painting Competition
UTulsa students: Join this friendly competition (and favorite TU student tradition) by painting Tucker Drive to bring on the Hurricane Spirit!
Homecoming Bonfire Build 2024
UTulsa students: Help continue UTulsa’s most famous Homecoming tradition – our Bonfire celebration! Volunteers meet at Dietler Commons to build the bonfire and keep the legacy alive.
Homecoming Party with DJ Austin Millz
UTulsa students: Homecoming is here, and we are celebrating! Join us for a party with DJ Austin Millz. Free food and drink tickets will be available at the event for UTulsa students.
Pop-up Market
UTulsa students with consumer packaged goods businesses may set up shop and sell to individuals who come to campus. This event is open to students, faculty, staff, and the public.
HCAR Works-in-Progress Seminar: Shelby Johnson
Paper Title: “Transformational Flows in Anishinaabe Ecologies and Agokwe Futures”
HCAR welcomes you to join us for our October Works-in-Progress Seminar. Shelby Johnson will be presenting on a project that reflects some of her recent research into early Indigenous gender and sexuality studies – in this case, by speaking on an Anishinaabe guide named Ozaawindib, who was an agokwe. Assigned male by colonial writers but living as a woman in her community at Gaa-Miskwaawaakokaag (or Leech Lake), Ozaawindib’s agokwe personhood is routinely elided by American writers. In this work, Johnson seeks to trace pathways through and beyond settler reports of Ozaawindib with the writings of her Anishinaabe contemporary, Bamewawagezhikaquay, also known as Jane Johnston Schoolcraft. She argues that Bamewawagezhikaquay’s retellings of aadizookaanag, or sacred origin stories in “Origin of the Robin” and “Corn Story,” index a mode of transformable embodiment that exists through lived responsibilities to local ecologies, which she often figures in the seasonal growth patterns of plants and in the fluid dynamics of waterways. In her talk, Johnson hopes to engage with her coordination of transformable embodiment and gendered responsibility to reread settler archives for agokwe roles that disrupt the smooth unfolding of a colonial epistemic norm.
If you would like to attend and have access to the electronic copy of Dr. Johnson’s paper, please email william-smith@utulsa.edu.
About Works-In-Progress Seminars
These seminars nurture a community of local and regional scholars by providing opportunities to share creative activity in an academically constructive environment. Each seminar will focus on pre-circulated drafts followed by a roundtable conversation among participants.