New Favorite Outdoor Spots at UNCG

Posted on September 10, 2024

Students chat while one swings and the other climbs a branch of a giant magnolia tree in UNCG Foust Park.

Fall promises cooler temperatures and beautiful colors. Students at UNC Greensboro are sure to be looking for the perfect spot to do homework, socialize, or relax in between the demands of midterm projects.

“In college and grad school, you’re looking for that third space,” says Abby Draut ’22, Piedmont legacy trails coordinator for Piedmont Land Conservancy. A “third space,” she explains, is an area outside the home, workplace, or classroom that becomes a space for leisure. “Whether you want to be alone or be social, a third space is one you want to be comfortable in.” 

Mapping Out A Third Space 

The construction staging zone will remain on the lawn outside the Jackson Library into next year, which cuts off access to some traditional outdoor hangouts. Fortunately, the more than 200 acres of campus is full of space for students to get away from the noise.

“You do not have to be active to benefit from the outdoors,” says Draut. “It can be enjoyed anyway you want. You can paint, do homework, play sports, run, walk, or sit under a tree all day. There’s a lot of effort going into making the outdoors more accessible and friendly to everyone.” 

As a capstone project for her master of science in parks and recreation management, Draut surveyed students to learn what they wanted from outdoor spaces. “Surprisingly, people wanted a space to do homework,” she says. “Granted, this is a stat from COVID-19, but people wanted more access to be comfortable outdoors. The other half of responses were students who wanted to play games or throw around a frisbee or a ball.”

Draut created a map that labels benches, lights, trees, accessible access points, and other attractive parts of campus. That map is still used by UNCG today. 

Here’s some spots that UNCG encourages you to check out as you find your perfect third space.

Chill by the Water 

The fountain at Moran Commons is a popular spot for students, but it’s not the only spot to enjoy the soothing sound of running water. 

Despite being the center of campus next to the EUC, Taylor Garden is somewhat of a hidden gem, just off the beaten path from the Minerva statue and College Avenue. Tables and chairs sit around a bubbling fountain. It’s a good place for friends to eat lunch or for a student who needs a change of scenery to inspire them while writing that important paper.

Further north, music students are familiar with the fountain and garden outside the Tew Recital Hall. The sound of running water makes it a popular spot for lunch on the lawn or yoga. If you don’t want to bring a lawn blanket or a yoga mat, there are also benches along the walkway around the fountain, and more seating inside the School of Music veranda where you might catch soothing sounds of music from students as they practice.

Combine the calming atmosphere of a pond with swimming koi behind the Smith Campus Ministries Center. UNCG’s groundskeeping crews recently gave the pond a much-needed makeover, restoring it to its former glory. You can make use of the benches there or bring your own chair to this shady spot. Do not be put off by the roar of the HVAC compressors that you’ll pass to reach it. Once you get there, you might feel like you’re in your own little world instead of the center of a bustling campus and city. 

A Campus Made for Walking 

Since the days of Dr. Anna Gove, the campus’ first physician who required daily walks in Peabody Park, UNCG has encouraged students to use the natural landscape for exercise. Follow any of the mapped walking trails, and pick the sidewalk or a winding path in the woods. 

Two of the most popular trails will take you north past the residence halls. The Golf Course Loop lets you cross small bridges overlooking streams, and you might catch sight of a golfer working on their swing, but the trees provide protection from stray balls and drivers. 

Peabody Park will immerse you even deeper into the nature experience. This historic mixed hardwood forest has been restored and preserved with native plants. It is so well maintained that it’s easy to forget you’re still on a campus full of thousands of students and just a short drive from downtown Greensboro. 

You can also use exercise as an excuse to spice up your menu with a saunter across Gate City Boulevard to Spartan Village. Grab a bite to eat from the restaurants – with specialties such as Asian fusion, soul food, and Peruvian-themed pizza – and dine out on the outdoor space alongside along Glenwood Avenue.

Relax or Play

One of the best things about Foust Park is how close it is to the heart of campus. It won’t take more than a few minutes to get there from the EUC or your last class of the day. Its well-tended trees add to the relaxing experience, even as cars drive by on nearby Spring Garden Street. And if you do a little exploring there, you might find UNCG’s hidden swing. 

If you don’t want to leave the Quad, take a seat in one of the new Adirondack chairs provided by a Green Fund awarded to the Office of Sustainability. These chairs are perfect for relaxing with a good book you’ve been itching to finish or with your laptop as you put the final touches on a project. 

Mix leisure with thought-provoking art by stopping in the Weatherspoon Art Museum courtyard. Fuel with a coffee from Borough coffee cart and take advantage of the speakers around the area that play soothing audio to add to the introspective nature of the museum. 

The secret spot Draut found as a student is the courtyard beside the UNCG Auditorium. “That one surprised me. It’s behind the auditorium along Tate Street,” she says. “There’s a little courtyard there, and it’s beautiful with a willow tree and a rosemary bush.” 

Your third space might be one of these, but they are far from the only option. While UNCG works hard on capital projects to enhance learning for generations of Spartans to come, today’s Spartans can jump on the chance to discover something new. Taking a left instead of your traditional right may lead to that one spot that’s so perfect, you and your friends will never want to leave it.

“Everybody has their own benefit from the outdoors,” says Draut. “Everybody has their own special relationship with nature. Find what nature means to you.”

Story by Janet Imrick, University Communications
Photography by Sean Norona, University Communications
Additional photography by David Lee Row and Martin W. Kane, University Communications

UNCG students practice yoga at Piney Lake to help center themselves and exercise.

Make time for wellness with UNCG’s recreational activities.

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Sign Up to Be a Homecoming Volunteer

Posted on September 09, 2024

Five UNCG alumni gather around the Rawk painted for Homecoming.
Members of Alpha Phi Omega Class of 1973 celebrate 50 years of the Rawk.

Homecoming is around the corner, and UNCG Alumni needs your help to make it another successful year.

Volunteers are an integral part of our Homecoming weekend every year and play a key role in the success of the event. We would very much appreciate your time, energy, and support at this year’s Class of 1974 Reunion, the Homecoming Bonfire, the all-new Spartan Street Fest, and more! As official HoCo Staff, you’ll receive a souvenir t-shirt and lanyard and have fun opportunities to engage with alumni, students, and our campus community – what are you waiting for?

Volunteers are needed for Friday and Saturday, October 4-5. Click here for descriptions of each volunteer role and coordinating times. Volunteers should plan to clear any work or comp time with their supervisors prior to committing to a volunteer position.

Calling all campus departments and organizations!

Are you planning a special event or activity around September 30-October 5, the week of Homecoming? We want to know! Please send us the name and logistical details of your event, along with a short description, and we will add it to our events calendar for that week. We can also provide a link in the description for folks to register, so don’t forget to include that! Send questions and event information to eacarlin@uncg.edu – thanks and Go Spartans!!

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Weatherspoon Art Museum Announces Exhibitions for Fall 2024

Posted on September 09, 2024

People mill about the UNCG Weatherspoon Art Museum lobby.

The Weatherspoon Art Museum welcomes back UNC Greensboro’s campus and community after a brief hiatus due to remodeling projects. The galleries and building underwent significant upgrades over the summer, including entirely new and environmentally efficient lighting in all the upstairs galleries, thanks to a generous grant from the Helen Frankenthaler Climate Initiative and deferred maintenance support from UNCG. The Benjamin Auditorium also saw upgrades to the sound system, including new assistive listening devices for all Weatherspoon programming. 

These improvements will not only highlight the collections to the best effect but also create a safer and more welcoming and engaging space for all visitors. 

This semester, the Weatherspoon also welcomes its next faculty fellow, Dr. Lalenja Harrington. The interdepartmental instructor has spent years making higher education accessible to more students with disabilities through the Integrative Community Studies Certificate Program, as well being a renowned poet and performer. She will be working closely with two different courses in the “Crip*: Artists Engage with Disability” exhibition over the coming academic year. 

Exhibition programming is designed to deepen these dialogues, and these newly renovated spaces are here to create a more welcoming experience for all. From film series in collaboration with student groups to American Sign Language–interpreted tours, the museum staff are committed to making these experiences accessible and engaging.  

As always, all Weatherspoon exhibitions, programs, and events are free and open to all.

WAM Fall Open House 
Saturday, September 14, 3-6pm 

The Weatherspoon staff invites returning visitors to come and enjoy refreshments, food by Chez Genèse, Ben and Jerry’s ice cream, music by René Roman, conversation, and gallery conversations in our new exhibitions.  

Interpreting America: Photographs from the Collection  
Through Dec 21, 2024  

Drawn from the Weatherspoon’s stellar collection, these photographs illustrate what artists have had to say about American culture from the late 19th through the early 21st centuries. The period spanned by these images ranges from Civil War battles, Western expansion vistas, and class and racial divisions to life in rural America today, increased economic prosperity, and hints of cultural alienation. Photographs such as these have shaped our ever-evolving definition of what the term “America” means. 

Space for Engagement: Visitors’ Top Picks 
Through October 26, 2024 

These five artworks were among the top 30 objects most often chosen and discussed by visitors who played the “You Choose!” game in 2022-23. Part of an 18-month grant-funded learning project called Leading with Objects, the interactive card game featured artworks from the museum’s collection and encouraged players to engage with the objects and one another. Building upon this activity, we want to know what key words you associate with these artworks. By sharing your thoughts, you’ll be helping us create a database that is more easily searchable. 

Learn more about the “Space for Engagement” here. 

Crip*| Artists Engage with Disability 
Through April 26, 2025  

This group exhibition features contemporary artists who engage with experiences and understandings of disability. They do so by thinking about the ways that one’s personal experience of disability always intersects with other aspects of their life. Collectively, their work in sculptures, drawings, videos, prints, and installations encourages us to fracture and reassemble the ways in which we think about who we are.  

Making Connections: Art, Place, and Relationships 
Through July 5, 2025  

Building on the museum’s mission to engage our stakeholders in more personal and meaningful ways, this installation of artworks from the collection showcases the Weatherspoon as an academic museum with deep connections to and relationships with its campus, Greensboro, and broader communities. 

Sheena Rose: Pause and Breathe, We Got This 
Through December 31, 2024 

A homecoming is in the works. The Weatherspoon is excited to announce its commission of a major new artwork by artist Sheena Rose, MFA ’16. A multidisciplinary artist working in animation, drawing, painting, and performance, Rose’s vibrant and energetic work is at once anchored in her Caribbean heritage and expansive in its explorations of culture and human experience. 

Save the Date 

In addition to the above exhibitions, a range of free programs rounds out the Weatherspoon’s offerings this fall. Mark your calendars for these special events to hear from art experts and gain a deeper appreciation for the Weatherspoon collections. 

Art Historians Talk 
Thursday, September 12, 5:30–7:30 p.m. 

Location: Margaret and Bill Benjamin Auditorium 

Learn about the compelling current research of four UNCG art historians: Professors Heather Holian, Claire Ittner, Elizabeth Perrill, and Emily Voelker. Hosted in partnership with the UNCG School of Art. Check our website for updates about discussion topics. Free and open to all. 

Drop-in Dialogues 
Fridays from September 20 to November 22, Noon–1 p.m. 

Let’s connect! Staff from across the museum will be available to chat with visitors in the “Making Connections: Art, Place, and Relationships” exhibition. These informal conversations are a chance to chat about the exhibition itself, specific works of art, or interesting details about the curation and installation processes. There’s no set agenda, and we invite your own perspectives. 

“Crip*” Film Series 

Join us for two film screenings in the Margaret and Bill Benjamin Auditorium, with light refreshments served in the Sculpture Courtyard before the film. This program emerged from conversations with the “Crip*” Advisory Committee, whose members expressed the desire to have alternate media to complement the works on view. The films were chosen from suggestions by the Advisory Committee, as well as research from WAM staff. We hope you find the selection interesting and come to all four screenings (stay tuned for Spring semester dates and times!). Free and open to all. 

Crip Camp 
Thursday, September 26, 5–7:30 p.m. 
Co-hosted by the Office of Accessibility Resources and Services 

Finding Dory 
Thursday, November 21, 5–7:30 p.m. 
Co-hosted by CoWAM 

“Interpreting America” Gallery Talk with George Dimock 
Wednesday, October 9, 3:30– 4 :45 p.m. 
Dillard Room and Herbert S. Falk Sr. Gallery 

George Dimock, Associate Professor Emeritus of Art, will discuss the American photography on display in “Interpreting America.” 

Community Collection Study Session: Disney 
Thursday, October 24, 6:00 – 7:00 p.m.

“Crip*” ASL-Interpreted Tour 
Saturday, October 26, 11:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m. 

The museum is committed to access for all, and as part of our ongoing efforts, we are introducing ASL-Interpreted gallery tours of the exhibition “Crip*: Artists Engage with Disabilities.” There will be two tours at 11 a.m. and Noon. Tours are free. Registration is required.

Story by Janet Imrick, University Communications
Photography by Sean Norona, University Communications

Students look at art or talk at a table at the UNCG Weatherspoon Art Museum.

Blend perspectives and experiences in creative ways at UNCG.

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Compliance Rolls Out New Reporting System

Posted on September 09, 2024

The Spartan statue stands over UNCG campus on a sunny day.

The University Compliance division created a new Confidential Reporting System to serve as a hotline for reporting compliance issues at UNC Greensboro and within its associated entities.

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Funding Friday: New Opportunities

Posted on September 06, 2024

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Spartan Thrive Thursday: The Communication Lab

Posted on September 05, 2024

UNCG students work together in the Communication Lab.

With students starting on year-long papers and presentations, courses can seem unbearable. Still, the Communication Lab, formerly known as the Writing and Speaking Center, has served as an easily accessible resource to ease some of the academic stress that comes with being a student. 

The Communication Lab provides one-on-one feedback on any writing, speaking, or visual project at any stage of the creative process. Consultants, also called peer educators, consist of undergraduate or graduate students who are trained with hands-on experience and can help identify how to finetune an upcoming speech or presentation, work on grammar or sentence structure, or transform a rough draft into a quality final draft and more regarding written and oral communication. 

The Communication Lab is on the third floor of the Moore Humanities and Research Administration (MHRA) building in Room 3211 and offers services to UNCG students, faculty, staff, and even alumni. 

Writing lab hours are: 

  • Monday – Thursday from 9 a.m. – 7 p.m. 
  • Friday from 9 a.m. – Noon 
  • Sunday online only from 3 – 8 p.m. 

Appointments are available now on Tracloud for individual or group sessions. You can prepare for a visit to the Communication Lab by bringing feedback you received on a project, access to your draft, and by knowing expectations for a particular assignment or what you want to work on ahead of time.  

Writers deserve good readers

“The writing center has helped act as a filter between my thoughts and my writing, helping me figure out how to take the complex arguments in my head and shape those into an actual, clear, concise, and articulate argument.” 

Ethan Divon, Writing Center Peer Consultant

“The speaking center employs a unique approach that revolves around putting the speaker at the center of the entire process. This approach involves asking open-ended questions that are designed to stimulate the speaker’s thought process and encourage them to generate new ideas and insights. “ 

Bosola Banjo, Speaking Center Peer Consultant

Jennifer Whitaker, director of the Communication Lab’s writing center, says, “Every writer deserves a good reader, and that’s why we exist.” Spartans can meet with consultants to review written communication of their choice, including writing outside of academic courses like a journal article or a scholarship essay. 

“The Communication Lab is a conversational space to try out new ideas so that writers feel prepared to go back and revise or start over and write from scratch,” Whitaker explains.  

Sessions between writers and their consultants can last up to 45 minutes. During a session, consultants will strategize with writers about their main concerns. Those may be citations, formatting, or editing-related. It is the writers, with the support of consultants, who set their own goals for their writing process.   

Speaking your way to success

“We strive to meet students at their current level of progress. We do not expect them to have anything prepared or completed before they come to us for assistance. Our goal is to provide support and guidance in speechmaking, no matter where the student is.” 

Cohan Counsil, Speaking Center Peer Consultant

“Often, students attend the Speaking Center as a requirement for public speaking assignments from their professors. However, we offer additional consultations including speech practices and conversations.” 

Jaela Agee, Speaking Center Peer Consultant

The Communication Lab supports students enrolled in Minerva’s Academic Curriculum (MAC) oral competency courses but is available to anyone with a public speaking, group leadership, or personal need. Speakers may drop by in person or schedule an online session for areas in public speaking delivery, interpersonal communication, and group or team communication. 

Speaking lab hours are: 

  • Monday – Thursday from 10 a.m. – 7 p.m.
  • Friday from 9 a.m. – Noon
  • Sunday from 4 – 8 p.m. 

Within the first few minutes of a session, consultants check in with student speakers to determine where they are in their speech-making process. Together, they’ll go over introductions and conclusions, verbal fillers, and other strategies that help them manage any anxiety over speaking. 

Erin Harrison, director of the Communication Lab’s speaking center, says, “Public speaking is not going to end after one speech. This is only the beginning of what’s to come.” 

Students can pre-record their speech and request a video review session. The lab will never write a paper or speech for the student, but instead provide guidance on developing their own verbal and non-verbal expressions, encouraging an increase in students’ confidence that prepares them for the next big project. 

Whether it be writer’s block, stress from public speaking, or other health-related problems, there are programs available for every Spartan at UNCG.

Story by Lauren Segers, University Communications
Photography by Sean Norona, University Communications

Discover what works for you.

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Posted on September 06, 2024

Blue and gold lights shine upon the UNCG Vacc clock tower.

This collaborative work compiles beautiful original works by the UNCG School of Music’s premiere faculty and students, with pieces by the Wind Ensemble, Casella Sinfonietta, and Symphony Orchestra.

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Students have settled into their dorms and figured out their class schedules. But it’s just as important for them to decide where ...

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This collaborative work compiles beautiful original works by the UNCG School of Music's premiere faculty and students, with pieces b...

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The Writing and Speaking Center have combined into the Communication Lab, but they still provide the peer-to-peer feedback that bols...

Spartans Lift Up the Folk Festival’s 10th Anniversary 

Posted on September 03, 2024

A man places the accordion onstage while a crowd watches.

The Greensboro community is primed to celebrate the North Carolina Folk Festival’s 10th Anniversary September 6-8. It’s a festive weekend where our downtown streets come alive with art and music from all over the world, and it’s no surprise that UNC Greensboro’s alumni, faculty, and students play a major role in each year’s festival.  

Not only is UNCG a sponsor of the festival, but some of our most creative alumni will take the stages, while students sell their art at the marketplace, staff and faculty members lead jam sessions, and other Spartans work to organize and plan this can’t-miss event in Greensboro. 

“I’ll be hosting a community Irish music session at Center City Jams on Saturday. Grab your tin whistle or fiddle and Come join us!”

– Gavin Douglas, Ethnomusicology Professor, School of Music 

A man sits with a flute.

Big Names Rocking the Folk Festival 

This year’s festival headliners are big-name draws. GRAMMY-nominated The War & Treaty, a husband-and-wife duo who were featured on Zach Bryan’s hit “Hey Driver,” bring their soulful country hits to the stage on Friday night.  

Then on Saturday, Los Lonely Boys will entertain festival crowds with their “Texican rock and roll” sound. You may know them from their number one single “Heaven” or their recent tour with The Who in 2022.  

Finally on Sunday, headliner Mipso brings Americana strings and harmonies to Greensboro. With a strong following from across the state, this Chapel Hill band takes bluegrass roots and influences from the Avett Brothers to make their own unique music. 

Music for Every Taste 

These famous names are only a fraction of the artistic talent that you’ll find at the North Carolina Folk Festival. From the festival kickoff on Friday until Mipso closes out the weekend on Sunday evening, you’ll find all genres of musical acts, dance performances and interactive jam sessions covering 7 different stages.  For a complete list of festival acts, scroll through the artist listing which includes audio files so you can check out their styles.

Stage set up in a Greensboro downtown parking lot with a group of singers on stage and a crowd watching from folding chairs.

Look out for the following bands featuring UNCG alumni and staff: 

  • Laurelyn Dossett ’99 will host Songs of Hope & Justice. 
  • Colin Cutler ’16 brings his banjo stylings and storytelling to the stage with Hot Pepper Jam band. 
  • Kate Musselwhite ’07 of the Queen Bees opens the festival on Friday afternoon. 
  • Juila Houghton ’20 will appear with her all-female band, Wild Roots. 
  • Ramon Garcia ’23 and Shane Wheeler ’22, graduates of the Miles Davis Jazz Program, will play with Unheard Project GSO. 
  • Abita Rorie ’07 and Brevan Hampden, UNCG staff and West African percussionists, will play with Dashawn Hickman presents Sacred Steel, a blues gospel band. 
  • Princess Johnson ’07 of Royal Expressions Repertory will lead a group of dancers at the Van Dyke Performance Space. 
  • Mark Dillon ’10 will lead the Honky Tonk Jam at Center City Jams. 

Check out the festival map and schedule so you don’t miss a single act. 

Laurelyn Dossett performs at 2019 Folk Festival

“I’ve Been Proud to be a Part of Greensboro’s Folk Festival since the Beginning.”

– Laurelyn Dossett ’99

More Than Just Music 

Not only are UNCG alumni involved in the bands set to play, but the festival’s artistic director, Ashley Virginia, is a 2019 alumna. Virginia and other folk festival organizers work to make sure the weekend is a full cultural experience with music, dance performances held in the Van Dyke Performance Space, art for sale in the marketplace, and festival food from a wide variety of local food trucks.  

For a taste of what you can expect at the North Carolina Folk Festival, check out these sights and sounds from last year’s festival:

Whether you want to listen and dance to original music from up-and-coming bands, join in a jam session, shop for local art, or simply enjoy the food and festivity of downtown on its most exciting weekend of the year, you’ll find it all at the North Carolina Folk Festival.  

Story by Becky Deakins, University Communications.
Photos by Sean Norona, University Communications.
Video by Grant Gilliard and David Lee Row, University Communications.

Band plays in front of a NC Folk Fest banner with filled audience seats in the foreground.

Bring Your Spartan Spirit to the Folk Festival!

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Posted on September 04, 2024

UNCG School of Education building.

More than $8 million was awarded to School’s faculty and initiatives in 2023 to advance their mission to students and the community. 

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Faculty Present: Workshops and Presentations in September 2024

Posted on September 03, 2024

Students clap in their theatre seats during a talk at UNCG.

UNCG faculty and researchers share their expertise in the sciences, the humanities, and the arts in special classes and talks hosted right here on campus, exploring topics and fostering conversations with students and sometimes the public outside the classroom or the lab.

Here are a list of talks that will be held on UNCG in September:

Interpreting America Gallery Talk
Tuesday, September 3, Noon – 1:00 p.m.
Weatherspoon Art Museum Herbert S. Falk Sr. Gallery

Join Emily Voelker, UNCG assistant professor of art history, and Elaine Gustafson, curator of collections and head of facilities at the Weatherspoon Art Museum, for a gallery talk on the new exhibition Interpreting America: Photographs from the Collection.

Casella Sinfonietta
Wednesday, September 4, 7:30 – 9:00 p.m.
Tew Recital Hall

The Casella Sinfonietta presents a faculty-student side-by-side concert of works by Kurt Weill, Charles Mingus, and George Gershwin. It features Annie Jeng, assistant professor of piano and piano pedagogy; and Conductor Jonathan Caldwell, assistant professor of conducting and director of bands.

This Earthen Door” Artist Talk and Book Signing
Thursday, September 5, 5:30-7:30 p.m. 
Weatherspoon Art Museum Margaret and Bill Benjamin Auditorium 

Associate Professor of Photography Leah Sobsey will give an artist talk and sign copies of her newest book “This Earthen Door,” a photographic reworking of Emily Dickinson’s herbarium with collaborator Amanda Marchand. Books will be available for sale, and light refreshments will be served. Held in conjunction with the UNCG School of Art.

Helping Honey Bees Help Themselves: Development of a Pheromone-Based Assay to Improve Honey Bee Health
Friday, September 6, 1:00 – 2:00 p.m.
Sullivan Room 201

Dr. Kaira Wagoner, research scientist in the Department of Biology, will speak on her most recent findings on bee health as part of the Chemistry and Biochemistry Fall 2024 Professional Seminars Speaker Series.

Artist Faculty Recital
Monday, September 9, 7:30 – 9:00 p.m.
Tew Recital Hall

Dr. Courtney Miller, professor of oboe, explores the theme of deep longing inherent in the human condition as well as the joy and peace that flow from love. This program will also feature works by Suzanne Polak, Manuel Pedro Ferreira, and Álvaro Cámara.

Art Historians Talk
Thursday, September 12, 5:30 – 7:30 p.m.
Weatherspoon Art Museum Margaret and Bill Benjamin Auditorium

Learn about the compelling current research of four UNCG art historians: Drs. Heather Holian, “Walt Disney and a New American Art (1932-66);” Elizabeth Perrill, “Curating South African Weaving at the Museum of International Folk Art;” Emily Voelker, “Generations: Photography & Native American Sovereignty Across the Atlantic;” and PhD candidate Claire Ittner, “Paper Ambivalence: Eldzier Cortor in the Archive.”

Home Front Battles: World War II Mobilization and Race in the Deep South
Wednesday, September 18, 3:00 p.m.
Jackson Library Hodges Reading Room

Dr. Charles Bolton, professor of history, will talk about his recently published book. It explores the role of race in World War II mobilization in the Deep South, where the needs of wartime industries and bases inflamed tensions around labor, land, and military service. To accompany Bolton’s presentation, an exhibit of materials from the Martha Blakeney Hodges Special Collections and University Archives will display posters, printed materials, and other documents related to World War II, race, and military service.

Words, Music, Memory: Songs Commemorating the Holocaust
Thursday, September 19, 7:30 – 9:00 p.m.
Tew Recital Hall

This lecture recital, made possible by the Arts Council of Greensboro and UNCG’s Jewish Studies and School of Music, centers around the idea of commemoration and calls upon human creativity, commitment, emotional connection, and contemporary context. Focusing on music based on the words of young people who witnessed the Holocaust – many of whom did not survive – the performance uses the power of music to bridge generations in active commemoration. Dr. Courtney Miller, professor of oboe, is among the musicians featured; and Dr. Suzanne Polak, collaborative pianist.

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