- All dayWatch PartyAcademics | Bernstein Hall, Experimental Exhibition and Performance Studio
On April 8, 2024, a solar eclipse transited across central New York - its path of totality falling only a few miles from Colgate's campus. Spectating this astronomical phenomenon became a mass social event: nearly a million people flocked to the region.Watch Party, an immersive multi-channel video installation, recreates this event, capturing the scene on the ground rather than the skies.Co-sponsored by Alternative Cinema and Film and Media Studies - All dayWatch PartyToday's Events | Bernstein Hall, Experimental Exhibition and Performance Studio
On April 8, 2024, a solar eclipse transited across central New York - its path of totality falling only a few miles from Colgate's campus. Spectating this astronomical phenomenon became a mass social event: nearly a million people flocked to the region.Watch Party, an immersive multi-channel video installation, recreates this event, capturing the scene on the ground rather than the skies.Co-sponsored by Alternative Cinema and Film and Media Studies - All dayWatch PartyCampus Life | Bernstein Hall, Experimental Exhibition and Performance Studio
On April 8, 2024, a solar eclipse transited across central New York - its path of totality falling only a few miles from Colgate's campus. Spectating this astronomical phenomenon became a mass social event: nearly a million people flocked to the region.Watch Party, an immersive multi-channel video installation, recreates this event, capturing the scene on the ground rather than the skies.Co-sponsored by Alternative Cinema and Film and Media Studies - All dayWatch PartyThe Arts | Bernstein Hall, Experimental Exhibition and Performance Studio
On April 8, 2024, a solar eclipse transited across central New York - its path of totality falling only a few miles from Colgate's campus. Spectating this astronomical phenomenon became a mass social event: nearly a million people flocked to the region.Watch Party, an immersive multi-channel video installation, recreates this event, capturing the scene on the ground rather than the skies.Co-sponsored by Alternative Cinema and Film and Media Studies - 8:30 AM15mGuided Morning MeditationToday's Events | Chapel House, Meditation Space
Please join us for morning guided meditation from 8:30 a.m. to 8:45 a.m. Monday to Friday.No experience required. - 8:30 AM15mGuided Morning MeditationCampus Life | Chapel House, Meditation Space
Please join us for morning guided meditation from 8:30 a.m. to 8:45 a.m. Monday to Friday.No experience required. - 11:20 AM1hThe Road to the White House: Colgate's 2024 Election SeriesToday's Events | Little Hall, Golden Auditorium
The Road to the White House: Colgate's 2024 Election Series will feature Peter Levine, associate dean of academic affairs and Lincoln Filene Professor of Citizenship & Public Affairs at Tufts University’s Jonathan Tisch College of Civic Life.Levine's talk - People are Not Points in Space: Why the ‘Left vs Right’ Spectrum Can’t Help Us Understand (or Solve) Political Disagreements - is presented by the Office of the President and the Political Science Department's Kella Lecture Fund.Brown bag lunch will be available while supplies last. - 4:15 PM15mGuided Afternoon MeditationToday's Events | Chapel House, Meditation Space
Please join us for guided meditation from 4:15 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. No experience required. - 4:15 PM15mGuided Afternoon MeditationCampus Life | Chapel House, Meditation Space
Please join us for guided meditation from 4:15 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. No experience required. - 4:30 PM1h 30mCloud War: Networked Killing in Israel/PalestineToday's Events | Alumni Hall, 111
Like most contemporary wars, Israel’s bombardment of Gaza is enabled by the algorithmic innovations of the day. In armored bases in southern Israel, intelligence soldiers cull through user-friendly interfaces displaying automatically generated recommendations of where and when the bombs should fall. Military heads, emulating Silicon Valley founders, brag innovations in AI have allowed them to build their killing capacities to scale. How did we get here? This talk lays bare a vast algorithmic supply chain undergirding war today.Sophia Goodfriend, a post-doctoral fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School’s Middle East Initiative, will thread together ethnographic research with Israeli intelligence veterans and Silicon Valley workers to provide an anthropological portrait of the pedestrian labor driving automated warfare: from Google technicians tinkering with facial recognition algorithms determining who is detained at makeshift checkpoints in Gaza City to reservists in Tel Aviv developing the speech to text software informing targeted strikes. In meditating on those bound up in warfare’s catastrophic effects, Goodfriend emphasizes how many more might play a role in demanding otherwise.Goodfriend received her doctorate in cultural anthropology from Duke University in June 2024. With years of experience reporting and writing from Israel/Palestine, Goodfriend’s academic research and journalistic writing have been published across a range of publications, including Foreign Policy, the London Review of Books, the Baffler, the International Journal of Middle East Studies, and the Journal of Palestine Studies. Goodfriend is a regular contributor to 972 Magazine and is finishing two separate book projects on automated warfare in Israel and Palestine.This event is cosponsored by the Department of Political Science. It is one of a series of "Digital War" speakers being organized by the Peace and Conflict Studies Program during the 2024–2025 academic year. - 4:30 PM1h 30mCloud War: Networked Killing in Israel/PalestineAcademics | Alumni Hall, 111
Like most contemporary wars, Israel’s bombardment of Gaza is enabled by the algorithmic innovations of the day. In armored bases in southern Israel, intelligence soldiers cull through user-friendly interfaces displaying automatically generated recommendations of where and when the bombs should fall. Military heads, emulating Silicon Valley founders, brag innovations in AI have allowed them to build their killing capacities to scale. How did we get here? This talk lays bare a vast algorithmic supply chain undergirding war today.Sophia Goodfriend, a post-doctoral fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School’s Middle East Initiative, will thread together ethnographic research with Israeli intelligence veterans and Silicon Valley workers to provide an anthropological portrait of the pedestrian labor driving automated warfare: from Google technicians tinkering with facial recognition algorithms determining who is detained at makeshift checkpoints in Gaza City to reservists in Tel Aviv developing the speech to text software informing targeted strikes. In meditating on those bound up in warfare’s catastrophic effects, Goodfriend emphasizes how many more might play a role in demanding otherwise.Goodfriend received her doctorate in cultural anthropology from Duke University in June 2024. With years of experience reporting and writing from Israel/Palestine, Goodfriend’s academic research and journalistic writing have been published across a range of publications, including Foreign Policy, the London Review of Books, the Baffler, the International Journal of Middle East Studies, and the Journal of Palestine Studies. Goodfriend is a regular contributor to 972 Magazine and is finishing two separate book projects on automated warfare in Israel and Palestine.This event is cosponsored by the Department of Political Science. It is one of a series of "Digital War" speakers being organized by the Peace and Conflict Studies Program during the 2024–2025 academic year. - 6:00 PM2hColgate University Women's Basketball vs UMass LowellToday's Events | Hamilton, N.Y., Cotterell Court
Colgate University Women's Basketball vs UMass Lowell - 6:00 PM2hColgate University Women's Basketball vs UMass LowellAthletics | Hamilton, N.Y., Cotterell Court
Colgate University Women's Basketball vs UMass Lowell