
All events
All events
Arts & Entertainment
Civic Engagement & Volunteerism
College of Arts & Sciences
Free Food & Giveaways
Health, Wellness & Recreation
Lectures, Conferences & Workshops
Outdoor & Adventure Opportunities
Religious & Spiritual
Social Events
Student Clubs & Organizations
Student Events
Virtual Events
All Upcoming Events
Skip date selector
Skip to beginning of date selector
August 2025
September 2025
October 2025
November 2025
December 2025
Thursday, September 25, 2025
- 6:45 AM45mFac/Staff HIIT
- 8:00 AM9hAndreas Rentsch: Lost and Found
- 8:00 AM9hAndreas Rentsch: Lost and Found
- 11:00 AM2hRec Swim
- 11:30 AM1hBIPP Pizza & Policy on Addiction and Public HealthBIPP Pizza & Policy on Addiction and Public Health Date: Thursday, September 25th Time: 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Location: Academic West 108 Presented by Professor Judy Grisel (Psychology) and Rose Nyounway '27 Pizza, salad and drinks for all who attend. A Zoom option will also be offered: Meeting ID: 992 7612 1823 Password: 520797 Sponsored by the Bucknell Institute for Public Policy (BIPP)
- 11:30 AM1hBIPP Pizza & Policy on Addiction and Public HealthBIPP Pizza & Policy on Addiction and Public Health Date: Thursday, September 25th Time: 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Location: Academic West 108 Presented by Professor Judy Grisel (Psychology) and Rose Nyounway '27 Pizza, salad and drinks for all who attend. A Zoom option will also be offered: Meeting ID: 992 7612 1823 Password: 520797 Sponsored by the Bucknell Institute for Public Policy (BIPP)
- 11:30 AM1hBIPP Pizza & Policy on Addiction and Public HealthBIPP Pizza & Policy on Addiction and Public Health Date: Thursday, September 25th Time: 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Location: Academic West 108 Presented by Professor Judy Grisel (Psychology) and Rose Nyounway '27 Pizza, salad and drinks for all who attend. A Zoom option will also be offered: Meeting ID: 992 7612 1823 Password: 520797 Sponsored by the Bucknell Institute for Public Policy (BIPP)
- 11:30 AM1hBIPP Pizza & Policy on Addiction and Public HealthBIPP Pizza & Policy on Addiction and Public Health Date: Thursday, September 25th Time: 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Location: Academic West 108 Presented by Professor Judy Grisel (Psychology) and Rose Nyounway '27 Pizza, salad and drinks for all who attend. A Zoom option will also be offered: Meeting ID: 992 7612 1823 Password: 520797 Sponsored by the Bucknell Institute for Public Policy (BIPP)
- 11:30 AM1hBIPP Pizza & Policy on Addiction and Public HealthBIPP Pizza & Policy on Addiction and Public Health Date: Thursday, September 25th Time: 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Location: Academic West 108 Presented by Professor Judy Grisel (Psychology) and Rose Nyounway '27 Pizza, salad and drinks for all who attend. A Zoom option will also be offered: Meeting ID: 992 7612 1823 Password: 520797 Sponsored by the Bucknell Institute for Public Policy (BIPP)
- 11:30 AM1h 30mIntroduction to Tableau for Data VisualizationThis workshop will cover the basics for creating a finished Tableau visualization. Topics include connecting to your data, choosing the right visualization, formatting, applying interactive filters, and combining visualizations into a user-friendly dashboard. Lunch is provided. Sign up through Suitable: https://app.suitable.co/institution/7843/activities/483610 (https://app.suitable.co/institution/7843/activities/483610) Instructor: Doug LeBlanc (Data Analytics Engineer)
- 12:00 PM45mBison Ride
- 12:00 PM5hGina Siepel: To Understand a TreeGina Siepel: To Understand a Tree encapsulates 6 years in communion with a single tree. Bridging art, ecology, and queer experience, the project approaches wood as a living being and explores interconnection, habitat, and environmental responsibility. Organized by the Museum for Art in Wood and curated by Jennifer-Navva Milliken.
- 12:00 PM5hGina Siepel: To Understand a TreeGina Siepel: To Understand a Tree encapsulates 6 years in communion with a single tree. Bridging art, ecology, and queer experience, the project approaches wood as a living being and explores interconnection, habitat, and environmental responsibility. Organized by the Museum for Art in Wood and curated by Jennifer-Navva Milliken.
- 12:00 PM5hStar Gazing: Pennsylvania Quilts RevisitedStar Gazing: Pennsylvania Quilts RevisitedThis exhibition – featuring quilts from Pennsylvania quilters and collectors – turns the eyes of post-internet contemporary art to look anew at traditional quilts and quilt making.
- 12:00 PM5hStar Gazing: Pennsylvania Quilts RevisitedStar Gazing: Pennsylvania Quilts RevisitedThis exhibition – featuring quilts from Pennsylvania quilters and collectors – turns the eyes of post-internet contemporary art to look anew at traditional quilts and quilt making.
- 4:30 PM1h 30mCreated in the Image?: Holocaust Perpetrators in Israeli FictionCreated in the Image?: Holocaust Perpetrators in Israeli Fiction Book Launch Lecture by Prof. Or Rogovin, Modern Hebrew Studies Program The perpetrators of the Holocaust—Nazis, Germans, and their collaborators—have occupied the popular imagination since the end of World War II. We see them everywhere in film and fiction. But how should they be portrayed? As cartoonish characters in leather jackets? As educated, well-dressed, and soft-spoken Nazis? As SS officers in black uniforms screaming orders in German with trains and chimneys in the background? This artistic dilemma is crucial for Israeli fiction that is written exclusively from the victim's perspective. Drawing on an extensive study of Israeli writing and its sociocultural context, Prof. Or Rogovin offers a pioneering analysis of how the representation of Holocaust perpetrators in this fiction, published between the 1940s and the 2000s, has developed from flat characters, likened to beast and demons, to full-fledged individuals, humanized as much as their victims.
- 4:30 PM1h 30mCreated in the Image?: Holocaust Perpetrators in Israeli FictionCreated in the Image?: Holocaust Perpetrators in Israeli Fiction Book Launch Lecture by Prof. Or Rogovin, Modern Hebrew Studies Program The perpetrators of the Holocaust—Nazis, Germans, and their collaborators—have occupied the popular imagination since the end of World War II. We see them everywhere in film and fiction. But how should they be portrayed? As cartoonish characters in leather jackets? As educated, well-dressed, and soft-spoken Nazis? As SS officers in black uniforms screaming orders in German with trains and chimneys in the background? This artistic dilemma is crucial for Israeli fiction that is written exclusively from the victim's perspective. Drawing on an extensive study of Israeli writing and its sociocultural context, Prof. Or Rogovin offers a pioneering analysis of how the representation of Holocaust perpetrators in this fiction, published between the 1940s and the 2000s, has developed from flat characters, likened to beast and demons, to full-fledged individuals, humanized as much as their victims.
- 5:00 PM45mBison Ride
- 5:00 PM45mPilates
- 6:00 PM45mBARRE
- 6:00 PM45mBison Ride
- 7:00 PM45mYoga
- 8:00 PM1h 30mRec Swim