Upcoming Events

01
Apr

Senior Sports Executive Brett Jewkes Shares Career Insights with USU Students

Lecture/Readings

Brett Jewkes, executive vice president and chief brand and communications officer of the Blank Family of Businesses (BFOB), will speak to USU students about his career in professional sports communications. Jewkes provides strategic counsel to Founder and Chairman, Arthur M. Blank, and other senior executives.

Blank, co-founder of The Home Depot, recruited Jewkes to BFOB in 2015 to manage his brand and lead the development of internal and external marketing communications strategies across the BFOB portfolio, which includes the NFL's Atlanta Falcons; Atlanta United of MLS; Atlanta’s Mercedes-Benz Stadium; golf retailer PGA TOUR Superstore; Mountain Sky Guest Ranch; West Creek Ranch; Paradise Valley Ranch; Auster at Dome Mountain; Atlanta Drive GC, and the Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation. Jewkes is also playing a lead role in development of new businesses, including expansion teams in the National Women’s Soccer League (NWSL) and Women’s TGL (WTGL), as well as advising Blank on a number of private investments.

12:00 pm - 1:00 pm | Huntsman Hall - Perry Pavilion (HH 470) |
10
Apr

LAEP Speaker Series: Nick Jabs, Beyond Projects: Practice, Research, and Leadership in the Public Realms

Lecture/Readings

About the Lecture: In this lecture, I’ll share how different modes of practice — design, research, and leadership — intersect and evolve through my own personal journey in the public realm. Together, these stories illustrate how the public realm is shaped not only by projects, but also by the systems, communities, and institutions that support them.

4:00 pm - 5:00 pm | Fine Arts Visual |
14
Apr

Tanner Talk Series Presents: How Do Poets Work Across Media? A Tanner Talk Discussion on Poets as Artists

Lecture/Readings | Tanner Talks

Join us on April 14 at 10:45 for the opening event to the Utah Poetry Festival 2026:" How Do Poets Work Across Mediums? A Tanner Talk Discussion" on poets as artists, a webinar symposium co-hosted with Utah Humanities. Featuring 13 poets and two graduate students, this event brings writers and artists into conversation about craft, collaboration, and the possibilities of working across forms. Centering text, image, sound, and performance, the symposium invites poets, artists, teachers, and readers to consider how creative practice shifts when it becomes interdisciplinary, collaborative, and publicly engaged.

This event is online only.
Zoom link: https://rebrand.ly/7bzfeik

10:45 am |
18
Apr

America 250: How revolutionary was the Revolution?

Lecture/Readings

A lecture by Dr. Kyle T. Bulthuis exploring questions such as: What did it mean in 1776 to have a revolution? What events and results in the British American colonies from 1763 to 1789 might be seen as revolutionary, then or now?

4:00 pm - 5:00 pm |
06
Jun

The Development of American English

Lecture/Readings

Dr. Mark Damen will discuss how American English developed and will explore some uniquely English words, such as okay and cattywampus.

4:00 pm - 5:00 pm |
18
Jul

The Other 1776: Dominguez, Escalante and the Mapping of Utah

Lecture/Readings

Dr. Rebecca Andersen will discuss the significance of the Dominguez-Escalante expedition to the settlement of Utah.

4:00 pm - 5:00 pm |
15
Aug

The Fourth American Revolution: How to Create a More Perfect Union Out of our Polarized Politics

Lecture/Readings

Dr. Partrik Mason will address the question, How do we reclaim our politics from an era of fracture and polarization? By laying out steps: First, by looking to the lessons of America's first three revolutions -- the Founding, the Civil War, and the rights revolution of the 20th century. Then, by adding a healthy dose of peacemaking into our politics, we can all participate in a fourth revolution to bring about "a more perfect union."

4:00 pm - 5:00 pm |
21
Nov

The War Came to Campus: Utah State University at World War I

Lecture/Readings

This lecture will discuss how Utah State University was shaped by World War I, and how that history lives today within institutional memory.

4:00 pm - 5:00 pm |
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