- LocationSign in to download the location
- DescriptionPractice
---
Event Details: https://bullsconnect.usf.edu/rsvp?id=1970833 - Websitehttps://bullsconnect.usf.edu/rsvp?id=1970833
- CategoriesSWIM, Training
More from Student Events
- Oct 269:00 AMMaking Strides Against Breast CancerAs you may know, October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month. Every year, the American Cancer Society hosts a noncompetitive walk to raise breast cancer awareness called Making Strides Against Breast Cancer. Our organization participates in this walk every year and we are inviting you to participate in it and walk with us! The event also consists of food trucks, music, and free swag! There is something to do for the whole family, even if you don't participate in the walk. --- Event Details: https://bullsconnect.usf.edu/rsvp?id=1970640
- Oct 269:30 AMGenCLEO Canvas!Come join us in our off-campus, door-to-door canvass! We are knocking on the doors of our fellow bulls to make sure they are registered and have a plan to vote this November! No experience is necessary; just bring water and walking shoes! We can also provide volunteer hours! --- Event Details: https://bullsconnect.usf.edu/rsvp?id=1967299
- Oct 2610:00 AMSkyway 2024: 12 Ways of Looking at a LandscapeSkyway 2024: 12 Ways of Looking at a Landscape is USF Contemporary Art Museum’s contribution to Skyway 2024: A Contemporary Collaboration, a multi-venue exhibition that profiles the best new art in the Tampa Bay region. Other institutions participating in Skyway 2024 include The John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art, the Museum of Fine Arts, St. Petersburg, the Sarasota Art Museum, and the Tampa Museum of Art. . . . . Skyway 2024: 12 Ways of Looking at a Landscape features artworks by Elisabeth Condon, Keith Crowley, John Gurbacs, Karen Tucker Kuykendall, Caui Lofgren, Bruce Marsh, Eric Ondina, Sebastian Ore Blas, Andrés Ramirez, Bradford Robotham, Erin Titus, and Susanna Wallin. Their artworks focus on a wide-open notion of landscape, invoking both the particularities of place and the universal ideas they provoke. Their wildly varied representations give sharp-eyed evidence of a common territory—the rich artistic landscape of a cultural region that has very much come into its own.. . --- Event Details: https://bullsconnect.usf.edu/rsvp?id=1959363
- Oct 2611:15 AMR Code for Researchers Workshop"R" is a very popular coding language used by many data scientists and researchers to display and calculate complex data sets. It is very commonly used in research to visualize data as it is very common to manipulate and allows for unique customizations. --- Event Details: https://bullsconnect.usf.edu/rsvp?id=1969714
- Oct 2611:30 AMOlympic Weightlifting Club PracticeFirst practice of the Fall 2024 semester! Come lift and socialize with other weightlifters—no experience is necessary! We will start the practice with a quick introduction of everyone and a quick run-over of the practice's program for the day. Lastly, we will end with a quick and easy session of team abs! --- Event Details: https://bullsconnect.usf.edu/rsvp?id=1962746
- Oct 2612:00 PMEDISON PEÑAFIEL: MARE MAGNVM (A Floridian Odyssey/Una Odisea en la Florida)GENERATOR: USF Contemporary Art Museum presents Edison Peñafiel’s MARE MAGNVM (A Floridian Odyssey/Una Odisea en la Florida), an immersive panoramic video installation filling the Harbor Hall Gallery at USF St. Petersburg. MARE MAGNVM features a stylized, monochromatic sea populated by 14 boats, each with its own unique collection of characters caught in a perpetual loop. Every 30 minutes, the film’s characters arrive back where they began. Despite being larger than life, their boats are constructed of various found objects, including wood, oil drums, and tires, pointing to real-life scenes of migration across bodies of water. . . . . The name MARE MAGNVM comes from the Latin for “Great Sea,” the term the Romans used to describe the Mediterranean. The word “mare” has a complicated history, being associated with evil spirits and terrors in various cultures, including in Old English and Old Irish. Today, the waters of the Mediterranean and the Atlantic, along with other sites of mass migration, reflect an ongoing horror, as millions of migrants flee war, instability, and climate change. MARE MAGNVM does not refer to a single migration event, but rather expands the viewers’ experience to encompass the phenomenon as a whole. A panoramic artwork, MARE MAGNVM immerses viewers in the struggle of crossing borders, alerting them to a future in which rising waters will push unprecedented numbers of people away from the places they call home.. . . . For questions or more information please email caminfo@usf.edu or call (813) 974-4133. This exhibition is free and open to all.. . --- Event Details: https://bullsconnect.usf.edu/rsvp?id=1961495