- LocationStudent Union
- Websitehttps://events.uconn.edu/fraternity-and-sorority-development/event/1105956-nphc-exec-meeting
- CategoriesStudent Activities
More from Master Calendar
- Nov 125:00 PMRésumés & Cover LettersThis event will allow students to receive feedback for their résumés & cover letters as they start applying to professional opportunities within a safe space on campus.
- Nov 125:15 PMGroup Fitness Class – ABC (45)For the full class schedule, descriptions, and to register, please visit the UConn Recreation website (https://recreation.uconn.edu/group-fitness-schedule/).
- Nov 125:15 PMGroup Fitness Class – Yoga FlowFor the full class schedule, descriptions, and to register, please visit the UConn Recreation website (https://recreation.uconn.edu/group-fitness-schedule/).
- Nov 125:30 PMCreative Sustenance Benefit ReadingDarcie Dennigan writes novels, poetry, and performance texts. Little Neck is her second work of fiction and was shortlisted for the 2022 New Directions Novel Prize. She is an Associate Professor-in-Residence in the English department at the University of Connecticut. Kyle Booten is the author of Gyms (dispersed holdings, 2025), a book that records his interactions with nine algorithmic "word gyms" that he designed to strain and retrain his poetic faculties. He also wrote Salon des Fantômes (Inside the Castle, 2024) and, with Katy Ilonka Gero, and edits Ensemble Park: A Journal of Human+Computer Writing. His algorithmically mediated writing has appeared or is forthcoming in Fence, Lana Turner, Boston Review, Michigan Quarterly Review, Blackbox Manifold and elsewhere. Nightingale, his browser extension that injects the web with contextually relevant excerpts from the poetry of John Keats, is available for free in the Chrome Web Store. He is an assistant professor in the English Department at the University of Connecticut. Trace Peterson is a poet, editor, and literary scholar. Her second book of poems The Valleys Are So Lush and Steep (Saturnalia Books, 2025) won the Alma Book Award, and her first book Since I Moved In (Chax Press, 2007/2019) won the Gil Ott Award. She is co-editor of the groundbreaking anthology Troubling the Line: Trans and Genderqueer Poetry and Poetics (Nightboat Books, 2013) and the founding editor of EOAGH, a small press which has won two Lambda Literary Awards and a National Jewish Book Award. Her scholarship and research have previously been supported by an NEH Post-Doctoral Fellowship in Poetics from the Fox Center for Humanistic Inquiry at Emory University, and she has most recently taught as a Visiting Assistant Professor in the English Department at the University of Connecticut.
- Nov 125:30 PMGroup Fitness Class – Row & StrengthFor the full class schedule, descriptions, and to register, please visit the UConn Recreation website (https://recreation.uconn.edu/group-fitness-schedule/).
- Nov 125:30 PMMath Club: Undergraduate research opportunities in mathThe math club is hosting a panel discussion on undergraduate mathematics research opportunities. The panelists will discuss how to become involved in mathematics research as an undergraduate and what the research process is like.


