Tech Forward Campus Conversation Input

If you are not able to attend either of the campus conversations about the next iteration of Michigan Tech's Tech Forward Initiatives and would like to provide input, please complete the Campus Input – Potential Initiatives form by 5 p.m. next Wednesday, March 26.

Feedback from electronic submissions and the first campus conversation, held on March 14, will be shared at the start of the second campus conversation, scheduled for 3-4:30 p.m. next Friday, March 28, in the Rozsa Lobby.

After the second campus conversation, all feedback will be compiled, summarized and shared with the campus community at a follow-up event scheduled for 3-4:30 p.m. on April 4 in the Rozsa Lobby.

This early feedback will position everyone to continue to think about future directions over the summer, and before we reconvene in fall 2025 to work through the details of designing and moving our new initiatives forward.

Winter Weather Safety Reminder

This is a reminder for departments to continue communicating procedures regarding weather-related absences.

During times when weather conditions deteriorate, each member of the University community must exercise personal judgment about their ability to get to or from campus safely. Interruptions in work due to weather are no different from other events that cause us to leave work early or arrive late.

If any employee’s work schedule is affected by winter weather, the first thing they should do is contact their supervisor directly and explain the situation. Hourly employees may use vacation or comp time to make up for hours missed due to bad weather. Exempt employees are expected to fulfill their regular job responsibilities.

Employees should contact Human Resources at 906-487-2280 with questions or concerns.

Brian Barkdoll Receives EWRI Seminal Paper Award

Professor Brian Barkdoll (CEGE) has been selected to receive the Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management – Seminal Paper Award by the Environmental and Water Resources Institute (EWRI) Awards Committee.

His paper, "The Battle of the Water Sensor Networks (BWSN): A Design Challenge for Engineers and Algorithms," has made a lasting impact in the field of water resources planning and management. This prestigious award will be presented at the 2025 World Environmental & Water Resources Congress, being held in Anchorage, Alaska, from May 18-21.

Congratulations, Dr. Barkdoll, on this well-deserved recognition!

2025 Upper Peninsula Teaching and Learning Conference Registration Now Open!

Registration for the 2025 Upper Peninsula Teaching and Learning Conference (UP-TLC) is now open!

Register for the UP-TLC at Sched. You will receive an email when session selections become available.

Conference Schedule and Pricing:

  • Thursday, May 8: Preconference Sessions
    Ticket Price: $45
    Includes Thursday preconference session admission, snacks and a parking pass (if needed). Registration also grants entry to "A Night at the A. E. Seaman Mineral Museum," featuring museum tours, hors d'oeuvres and networking opportunities.

  • Friday, May 9: Full-Day Conference
    Ticket Price: $95
    Includes access to all scheduled Friday sessions; breakfast, lunch and snacks; and a parking pass (if needed).

Conference Tracks:

  • AI in Education — Explore the integration of generative artificial intelligence (AI) tools and other machine learning applications to enhance the teaching and learning process. Topics may include leveraging AI for course design optimization, AI-driven student tutoring (such as custom GPT systems) and AI-assisted grading and feedback systems. Presenters might also explore AI’s role in adaptive learning technologies and predictive analytics for student success.

  • Inclusive Teaching — Learn about strategies and tools for creating more inclusive learning environments. Topics may include the accessibility of course materials, Universal Design for Learning (UDL) strategies and the use of EdTech tools that help ensure all students have equal opportunities to succeed. Presenters can highlight practices that promote equity, remove barriers and enhance the overall student experience for learners from diverse backgrounds and abilities.

  • Active Learning and Student Engagement — Learn about strategies and tools that foster active participation in face-to-face and online environments. Topic areas may include active learning techniques like interactive lectures, or team-based and problem-based learning. Additional strategies like case studies, peer teaching and the flipped classroom model are also appropriate. Presenters may also highlight digital tools that encourage collaboration, real-time feedback and dynamic student participation in diverse learning settings.

  • Innovative Strategies in Education — Discover forward-thinking teaching practices and pedagogical approaches designed to enhance learning. Topics may include mastery-based learning, the use of learning portfolios, gamification and the integration of emerging technologies such as virtual and augmented reality. Presenters may showcase strategies that support improved learning outcomes and foster critical thinking in all teaching modalities.

Billing Information:

Universities and colleges have been assigned a University Billing Code* that attendees can enter during registration to charge their institution. Attendees without a University Billing Code will receive instructions for payment via the MTU Techshop.

* For MTU: Each college has a unique billing code provided to the dean and college director of administration. Registrants should use the appropriate code corresponding to the designated index.

Provost’s Final Open Office Hour of 2024-25

Provost Andrew Storer will be holding his final open office hour of the 2024-25 academic year next Wednesday, March 26, from 1:30-2:30 p.m. at Velodrome Coffee Company, located on the first floor of the Van Pelt and Opie Library. Feel free to stop by; appointments are not required for open office hours.

Provost Storer will continue to hold regular office hours from 1:30-3:30 p.m. each Thursday during the spring 2025 semester. Faculty, staff and students are welcome to schedule an appointment by emailing Amie Ledgerwood at asledger@mtu.edu.

The information provided here is also available on the Academic Affairs website. To view it, click the Office Hours icon in the bottom right corner of the banner image at the top of the page.

Sustainability Film: 'Women of Carbon'

The 2025 Sustainability Film Series, coordinated by Michigan Tech Office of Sustainability and Resilience, will present March’s film “Women of Carbon” at 7 p.m. tomorrow, March 20, in Fisher 135. The film is free and everyone is welcome to attend. The film will be followed by a facilitated discussion and refreshments.

Add “Women of Carbon” to your Google Calendar.

“Women of Carbon” highlights innovative women redefining our relationship with carbon by repurposing living materials and driving decarbonization, while navigating challenges in male-dominated industries to restore, protect and preserve the planet.

Film sponsors include the Keweenaw Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, Keweenaw Co-op, Lake Superior Stewardship Initiative, WUP MiSTEM Network, Friends of the Land of Keweenaw (FOLK), Keweenaw Land Trust, and Michigan Tech's Office of Sustainability and Resilience and Hardwood Mass Timber Institute.

Series Details:

  • What: 15th Annual Sustainability Film Series
  • When: Third Thursday of each month at 7 p.m., through May
  • Where: Fisher 135 or 138 (refreshments in lobby)
  • Cost: Free! $5 donations are greatly appreciated. You can make a donation online to support the Sustainable Film Series.

Upcoming Film:

“Common Ground” — April 17, Fisher 135
Dig into the regenerative agriculture movement and consider how working to heal our soils holds the power to mitigate climate change, restore ecosystems, and build a more equitable food system, while hearing from diverse voices working together to create a sustainable future.

Art in Silico Speaker: Martin Krzywinski Presenting Workshop/Talk

The Art in Silico Event Series is excited to welcome Martin Krzywinski to Michigan Tech’s campus as part of this year’s programming!

Krzywinski is a staff scientist at the Michael Smith Genome Sciences Centre at BC Cancer, specializing in bioinformatics and data visualization. He developed Circos, a widely used tool for visualizing genomic data, which has been featured in journals like Nature and Science. His work extends to scientific communication, co-authoring “Points of Significance” and “Points of View” columns in Nature Methods to improve data presentation in research. Additionally, he teaches workshops on data visualization and has contributed information graphics to mainstream outlets like The New York Times and Wired.

“Art allows us to find ourselves in the science. Because, while milestones in scientific discovery may be inevitable, our personal reaction to the world they describe is not,” said Krzywinski.

Check out his two events in the Art in Silico Event Series:

Martin Krzywinski Creative Talk
Date/Time: Monday, March 24, from 3:30-5 p.m.
Location: MUB Alumni Lounge
Talk Title: “Explain visually, explain well. Practise and philosophy of scientific communication”

In this talk, Krzywinski will distill the core concepts of information design into practical guidelines for creating visual explanations of science: figures, posters and graphical abstracts. The focus will be on clarity and concision and on the idea that form follows function. You'll learn visual strategies for organization, emphasis and theme. To illustrate these guidelines concretely, he will walk attendees through redesigns of scientific visualizations from the wild.

*****

Martin Krzywinski Creative Workshop
Date/Time: Tuesday, March 25, from 4-6 p.m.
Location: Rekhi 112

Working on a creative project but would like another set of eyes? Thinking of submitting something to the 2025 Art in Silico exhibition, but need some help deciding on a direction? Krzywinski’s Creative Workshop is perfect for you! In this session, Krzywinski will lead by sharing his experiences in combining science, art, visualization and design to create explanations, promote engagement and stir the imagination. From public signage, music videos about transfinite numbers and posters depicting cancer journeys as trees, to his annual “Pi Day” celebration.

The workshop's final 90 minutes is an open-floor session where you’ll have the chance to share your work, ask questions and get feedback from Krzywinski and fellow attendees. Whether you need guidance on visual storytelling, refining your concept or making your work more impactful, this is your opportunity to explore creative strategies in a supportive and inspiring environment.

Design Expo Workshop: Posters, Images & Visualizations

Join us for our second Design Expo workshop! We’ll cover principles you can use to ensure your posters and the images and data you display in them are readable and appealing, and run through tools you can use to design supporting images. The second half of the session will be devoted to questions and open work time.

Workshop Details:

  • What: Design Expo Workshop: “Posters, Images & Visualizations”
  • When: Wednesday, March 19, from 2-3 p.m.
  • Where: Library 244
  • Registration: Register for the Workshop.

CS Faculty Candidate Presentation with Ali Shokri

Please join the Department of Computer Science (CS) on Friday, March 21, at 1 p.m. in Rekhi G005 for a research presentation by tenure-track faculty candidate Ali Shokri, following the social hour in Rekhi 218 (coffee and snacks) at 4 p.m.

The title of Shokri's presentation is "When software productivity meets code quality."

From the abstract:
Software is at the core of modern society, driving advancements in science and industry. However, software development remains inherently complex and resource-intensive. Developers spend, on average, 20-40% of their time writing new code, yet inefficient workflows, redundant tasks, and poor tooling hinder progress. With global software development expenditures exceeding $1.4 trillion annually, improving productivity can significantly reduce costs and expedite delivery. Meanwhile, quality assurance and debugging account for 50% or more of total development costs, with studies showing that the cost of fixing defects can increase by up to 100X if detected late in the lifecycle. Despite the immense focus on both productivity and quality, these two aspects of software engineering are often treated as separate concerns, leading to inefficiencies and compromises. In this talk, I will present a novel approach to bridging software productivity and quality by introducing a framework that unifies both aspects. By aligning development efficiency with quality assurance from the outset, we can enable automated software construction approaches that accelerate implementation while ensuring both syntactic and semantic correctness of the code. I will also share insights from my research on addressing this gap, paving the way for a more sustainable and scalable future in software engineering.

Shokri is a postdoctoral research associate in the Bradley Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Virginia Tech, working at the intersection of software productivity and quality. His research focuses on formally verified LLM-based approaches, aiming to improve software efficiency and reliability. He earned his Ph.D. in Computing and Information Sciences from Rochester Institute of Technology in 2023, where his research on software synthesis was recognized as the first-place award winner at ASE ’21. His work has been published in ICSE, OOPSLA, ASE, ICPC and ICSA, covering areas such as program analysis, code comprehension, software architecture, security and synthesis.

During Shokri's time at Google and PARC as a Ph.D. research intern, he contributed to ML-based synthesis in Google’s Bard project as well as evolutionary-based synthesis in PARC’s cyber-physical controller reconstruction project. These efforts resulted in two inventions, pending patents. Beyond research, he is an active member of the software engineering and security community, serving as a PC member for leading conferences such as ICSE, ASE, USENIX, SANER, S&P, MSR, ICPC, ECOOP, SCAM, ISSTA and PLDI, as well as a reviewer for top journals including TSE, IEEE Software and JSS. He has mentored multiple undergraduate, graduate and Ph.D. students and has submitted grant proposals as a PI and co-PI.

MAE Graduate Seminar Speaker: Jared Long-fox

The next Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering (MAE) Graduate Seminar speaker will present at 2 p.m. tomorrow, March 20, in EERC 103.

Jared Long-fox will present "Lunar Technology Development: Instrumentation, Computational Regolith Mechanics, and Resource Utilization."

Long-fox is a planetary exploration research scientist and Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Physics at the University of Central Florida (UCF).

Having previously served as the chief scientist of the UCF Exolith Lab — earning a B.S. and M.S. in Geology at the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology — Long-fox is now a NASA Space Technology Graduate Research Opportunity Fellow, a visiting researcher in the NASA Kennedy Space Center Swamp Works Lab, vice chair of the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), and advisor on the Science Advisory Board (SAB) of the Plant the Moon Challenge.

With extensive research development and passion for computational modeling, exploration hardware development, electronics, robotics, geophysics, and geology, Long-fox's focus extends beyond Earth-based volcanism into settlement technology development, laboratory studies, fieldwork and reduced gravity flight testing.

BioMed Seminar Series Speaker: Kerrer Alghazali

The next guest speaker in the Department of Biomedical Engineering (BioMed) Seminar Series will present on Friday, March 21, at 3 p.m. in Chem Sci 104 and virtually via Zoom.

Join the BioMed Seminar on Zoom.

Kerrer Alghazali from the New York Institute of Technology will present "The Frontier of Medical Device Development: Exploring Innovations and Challenges in Tissue Regeneration."

Read Alghazali’s abstract and bio at the University Events Calendar.

In the News

Andrew Barnard (VPR) was a guest on the March 16 episode of the “Copper Country Today” radio program. The episode was titled “MTU’s R1 Status and Its Impact on the Community.”

*****

NASA’s Earth Observatory and SciTechDaily quoted Simon Carn (GMES) in stories about satellite observations of volcanic activity in the South Sandwich Islands. Carn explained the impact of volcanic emissions on cloud patterns, particularly noting the enhanced levels of sulfur dioxide observed from Mount Michael. 

*****

Omnexus mentioned Fei Long and Ezra Bar-Ziv (both MAE) in a story about their involvement in a project to improve the clarity of recycled plastics using a new solvent-based technique.

*****

Floral Daily picked up last week's UPword story highlighting work by Jung Yun Bae (MAE) to develop a robotic system for lavender harvesting. Bae was quoted in the story.

*****

Forbes highlighted the Department of Social Sciences’ industrial heritage and archaeology graduate program as one of 34 national success stories exemplifying a new higher education strategy: offering "niche programs catering to high-demand, specialized fields." Launched in 1990, the program allows students to study industrial remains at sites across the Upper Peninsula and “combines archaeology, history, anthropology, and engineering elements to preserve and interpret America's industrial heritage.”

*****

Montana’s High Plains Journal mentioned Michigan Tech in a story about a multi-institution team, including MTU, receiving a $1.5 million grant for research into ice-controlling biomolecules for military use in cold environments. The project aims to develop technologies to prevent ice buildup and reduce frostbite risks in Arctic conditions.

*****

The Keweenaw Report mentioned Michigan Tech in a story about the 4th Annual Nanda-Gikendan Powwow, being co-hosted by the Keweenaw Bay Ojibwe Community College and the Biskaabiiyaang Collective registered student organization at MTU.

*****

CarBuzz mentioned Michigan Tech’s Keweenaw Research Center in a story about Ram’s Heavy Duty trucks undergoing winter testing on ice tracks and snow climbs at the facility. 

*****

The Detroit Free Press, MLive and Yahoo! Sports mentioned Michigan Tech alumni Jenny (Sorenson) Wypych '01, Jason Wypych '01 and Michigan Tech women's basketball guard Alyssa Wypych in stories about Rockford’s Anna Wypych being named Michigan's 2025 Miss Basketball.

*****

The Spokesman-Review of Spokane, Washington, interviewed Michigan Tech Nordic skier Bridget Burns in a story about her experience competing in the NCAA Skiing Championships. Burns shared her journey to nationals and reflected on the challenges and highlights of her season.

*****

The Daily Mining Gazette mentioned Michigan Tech basketball junior guard Marcus Tomashek in a story about his selection as the D2CCA Midwest Region Player of the Year.

*****

The Daily Mining Gazette covered Michigan Tech hockey forward and captain Jack Works signing a professional contract with the Wheeling Nailers in the ECHL.

*****

Michigan Tech alum John Scott '10 (B.S. Mechanical Engineering) was a guest on the March 17 episode of the Wild on 7th podcast, titled “John Scott, St. Patrick’s Day and Dropping Gloves.” In the episode, Scott discussed his NHL career, time with the Minnesota Wild, and his Michigan Tech degree.

Reminders

ASO Student Development Forum

In its commitment to providing academic and professional development opportunities for its members and the MTU student community, the African Students Organization (ASO) at Michigan Tech invites you to the ASO Student Development Forum this spring.

The theme of the forum is "Engaging with the Dean of Students and Director of IPS." Refreshments will be provided.

Event Details:

  • What: ASO Student Development Forum
  • When: Monday, March 24, from 5-7 p.m.
  • Where: Fisher 135
  • Registration: Register for the Forum.

*****

Join Us at the 11th Annual Undergraduate Research & Scholarship Symposium

The 11th annual Undergraduate Research & Scholarship Symposium (URSS) is set for Friday, March 21, from 1:30-3:30 p.m. in the Rozsa Lobby, with awards announced at 3:15 p.m. This event highlights the outstanding research conducted by Michigan Tech’s undergraduate students, showcasing a wide range of disciplines and innovative projects.

Attending the URSS is a great way to support and celebrate our student researchers as they present their work and share their discoveries. It’s also an opportunity to engage in conversations with students, ask questions about their research and gain insight into the exciting projects happening across campus. For faculty and staff mentoring students, this event serves as an excellent introduction to the many research possibilities available at Michigan Tech, so please encourage them to attend.

This year, the URSS coincides with Michigan Tech’s Preview Weekend, providing a valuable chance to showcase the University’s dynamic research environment to prospective students and their families. Seeing the incredible work being done by our undergraduates may inspire future Huskies to embark on their own research journeys.

We invite you to join us at the URSS to support our student researchers and help foster the next generation of scholars. We hope to see you there!

*****

Tomorrow: Info Session on Accelerated and Online Graduate Degrees

If you’re an undergraduate student with a GPA of at least 2.75, join representatives from Michigan Tech Global Campus and the Graduate School tomorrow, March 20, at 5 p.m. in Fisher 135 for an in-person information session on MTU’s online graduate programs and accelerated master’s degrees.

The session will unpack the details of the following topics:

  • Accelerated master’s programs
  • Online graduate programs
  • Double-counting undergraduate credits
  • Senior Rule
  • The cost savings of accelerated degrees
  • The Graduate School application process

Event Details:

  • What: Info Session on Accelerated and Online Graduate Degrees
  • When: Thursday, March 20, at 5 p.m.
  • Where: Fisher 135
  • Register: Register for the Info Session.

There will be pizza and lemonade, so make sure you bring both your appetite and your questions!

Looking for more information? Please contact Amanda at globalcampus@mtu.edu.

*****

CS Faculty Candidate Presentation with Jie Wu

Please join the Department of Computer Science (CS) today, March 19, at 3 p.m. in Rekhi G005 for a research presentation by tenure-track faculty candidate Jie Wu, following the social hour in Rekhi 218 (coffee and snacks).

The title of Wu's presentation is "Building Trustworthy and Safe AIware with Systems Thinking."

From the abstract:
As we transition from software to AIware (i.e., AI-powered software), ensuring the reliability and safety of AIware becomes paramount, especially in the age of Large Language Models (LLMs). In this talk, I will introduce a systems thinking approach to address trustworthiness issues in AIware, emphasizing the importance of connections, feedback loops, layers, and new processes. I will demonstrate this approach through a series of works. First, I focus on the truthfulness of Code LLMs through a newly developed benchmark called HumanEvalComm, which evaluates their ability to ask clarifying questions. Second, I further highlight the development of the LLM-agent framework, Okanagan, and the instruction fine-tuning method, ClarifyCoder, to enhance the communication skills of Code LLMs. Finally, I share how systems thinking can address the collaboration challenges when building products with AI components.

Wu is a postdoctoral fellow at the University of British Columbia. His research lies at the intersection of software engineering (SE) and AI, focusing on trustworthy AIware (i.e., AI-powered software). He received his Ph.D. from George Washington University, where he studied automated online controlled experiments. He received his M.S. and B.S. at Shanghai Jiao Tong University. Before his postdoctoral fellowship, he worked as a software engineer for a decade in the industry at Snap Inc., Microsoft, and a startup. He was a research intern at Google Research and Microsoft Research.

Wu has published in top venues, including ACM Transactions on Software Engineering and Methodology, Foundations of Software Engineering, AAAI, IJCAI, etc. His single-author paper was recognized as a Best Paper Award candidate at the IEEE/ACM 3rd International Conference on AI Engineering (CAIN 2024). He serves as a program committee member of different tracks for SE conferences, including RAIE 2025, CAIN 2025, SANER 2025, ASE 2024 and FSE 2024. More information is available on Wu's website.

*****

Tomorrow: Mineral Museum Spring Sale

On the first day of spring, tomorrow, March 20, receive 20% off one item* at the A. E. Seaman Mineral Museum’s gift shop. With home decor, mineral kits, games, international to local specimens, and more — the gift shop has exciting items for everyone!

Museum admission is waived for Michigan Tech students, staff and faculty with a valid MTU ID. We are open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday.

* Cannot be combined with other discounts. Exclusions apply.

*****

Celebrate New Books by Stephanie Carpenter, M. Bartley Seigel

Please join us tomorrow, March 20, at the Orpheum Theater in Hancock for An Evening of Literature and Music celebrating new books by novelist Stephanie Carpenter and poet M. Bartley Seigel, both creative writing faculty in the Department of Humanities.

This evening of literature and music honoring Seigel's and Carpenter's new books will feature readings, book signing and music from special musical guests, Dead North and Willowby. Doors open at 7 p.m. Readings and music start at 7:30 p.m.

Seigel is the author of “In the Bone-Cracking Cold,” his latest poetry collection published this week by Wayne State University Press. The collection was described by bestselling author Roxane Gay as “part love song, part monument, part elegy, wholly unforgettable.”

Carpenter is the author of “Moral Treatment,” published on Feb. 25 by Central Michigan University Press. A work of literary historical fiction, the novel is the inaugural winner of the Summit Series prize. It is set in 1889 at a fictionalized version of the former Northern Michigan Asylum in Traverse City.

*****

This Week's C-Cubed Luncheon Menu

Carved and Crafted Catering at Michigan Technological University invites faculty, staff, and their guests to the C-Cubed Luncheon, held from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. every Thursday in the Memorial Union Alumni Lounge (MUB 107).

Menu for Thursday, March 20:

  • Meatball Sub
  • Ratatouille with Cannellini Beans (V) (VG)
  • Italian Vegetables (V) (VG)
  • Minestrone Soup (V) (VG)
  • Italian Chopped Salad
  • Cookie Platter (V)

The C-Cubed lunch buffet menus are created and prepared by Chef Luis Delgado and his culinary team. As the name suggests, the meals are meant to foster conversation, community and collegiality. Attendees may bring their lunch instead of purchasing the buffet. Fruit-infused water, coffee and tea are available free to all attendees. All vegetarian, vegan and gluten-free items on the buffet are labeled for easy identification. Meals are for dine-in only, and personal containers and to-go meals are not permitted.

The buffet lunch is $15.50 per person. Cash, credit cards and gift cards are accepted. Gift cards can be purchased in the Memorial Union Office (MUB 101).

You can submit C-Cubed feedback using C-Cubed Survey/Comments form. To join the C-Cubed Luncheon Email List and receive weekly menus, please complete the sign-up form.

Today's Campus Events

To have your event automatically appear, please submit them to the University Events Calendar.

Isle Royale Art Exhibition - Michigan Tech Art

MICHIGAN TECH ART SERIES EVENT Enter into a world of artistic expression inspired by the wilderness of Isle Royale. The artworks showcased in this exhibition have all been...

*****

Master's Defense: Negar Aghaei

Sustainable Communities Advisor: Chelsea Schelly RURAL ELECTRIFICATION FOR HEATING AND COOLING: CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES FOR EQUITABLE DEVELOPMENT IN THE RURAL NORTH ...

*****

Towards Next-Generation Integrated Hydrologic, Ecological, and Water Quality Modeling

Environmental Engineering Faculty Candidate Seminar Han Qiu, Research Scientist, Department of Sustainable Earth Systems Sciences, University of Texas...

*****

PhD Defense: Kendall Belopavlovich

Rhetoric, Theory and Culture Advisor: Stefka Hristova THE ANIMATED FRONTIER FLUCTUATIONS OF POWER ACROSS TIME AND SPACE IN FLOWS OF U.S. AND JAPANESE ANIMATED MEDIA Attend...

*****

PhD Defense: Miraj Bhakta Kayastha

Civil Engineering Advisor: Pengfei Xue GREAT LAKES AND ITS REGIONAL CLIMATE IN THE FUTURE Attend Virtually: https://michigantech.zoom.us/j/9630145676?omn=86196657570

*****

HuskyLEAD - Effective Leadership Transitions

In Student Leadership and Involvement, we often hear from groups that had a "bad transition" between student organizations leaders. They lack historical knowledge, miss...

*****

SoundGirls General Meeting!

Join us in Walker 210 at 5pm every Wednesday for our general meeting!

*****

Weekly Meeting

We meet on the fourth floor of the MEEM to discuss plans for the week and work on on going projects. All are welcome to attend.

*****

How can I be Saved?

A bible study geared towards the salvific work of Christ on the Cross

*****

Modern Languages Film Series: Aire: Just Breathe

Modern Languages at Michigan Tech is proud to present our Spring 2025 Film Series! Aire: Just Breathe is a 2024 Spanish film from the Dominican Republic. "In the year 2147, a...