From ssnet_list at u.washington.edu Mon Nov 3 14:33:33 2025 From: ssnet_list at u.washington.edu (Monika Sengul-Jones via Ssnet_list) Date: Mon Nov 3 14:49:23 2025 Subject: [Ssnet_list] Unruly intelligences and Normalization and Its Discontents: Concepts for Limited Subs: Updated Mellon Foundation Call for Concepts In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: *Apologies for cross-posting. * Hey everyone, For those of you on this list who have faculty appointments, note the opportunity below to submit Mellon Foundation proposals for internal consideration on two provocative themes: "unruly intelligences" and "normalization and its discontents." Yours, Monika ---------- Forwarded message --------- *From: *OR Limited Submissions *Date: *Monday, November 3, 2025 at 10:12?AM *Subject: *REVISED Limited Submission: Updated Mellon Foundation Call for Concepts *UPDATE: The lead Principal Investigator (PI) must be a faculty member and/or dean in a program or department in the humanities or humanistic social sciences; Co-PIs can come from other departments.* *Sponsor:* Mellon Foundation *Program:* 2026 Call for Concepts: ?Unruly Intelligences? and ?Normalization and Its Discontents? *https://www.mellon.org/article/higher-learning-open-call-for-concepts-2026 * *Award amount:* $250,000 - $500,000, with durations of up to four years *Number of applications UW can put forward:* 9 (3 for Seattle Campus, 3 for Bothell Campus, 3 for Tacoma Campus) *OR internal deadline:* 11/19/2025 *Sponsor deadline:* Register up to 9 concepts by UW (3 per campus): 12/01/2025; Concept Note Submission: 2/17/2026 *Eligibility: *The lead Principal Investigator (PI) must be a faculty member and/or dean in a program or department in the humanities or humanistic social sciences; Co-PIs can come from other departments. *Program Description*: Higher Learning?s Open Call for Concepts supports inquiry into issues of vital social, cultural, and historical import. Projects should engage teams of scholars and/or students, and have visible, enduring impact at the institution. The Mellon Higher Learning team will review all submissions and invite a small number of the most promising concepts to be developed into full proposals for potential grant funding.?? This funding opportunity is overseen by Mellon?s Higher Learning program. *Applications must be demonstrably grounded in the humanities and led by scholars in the humanities and humanistic social sciences*. Experimental methodologies, interdisciplinary and community collaboration, and pathways to informing campus and/or wider policies and practices are welcome. The Mellon Foundation invites institutions of higher education to submit applications for research and/or curricular projects focused on either of the following two areas: *Unruly Intelligences* The emergence of generative AI has triggered a firestorm of techno-utopian promises and apocalyptic predictions alike. With so much at stake, the humanities have an urgent role to play in shaping contemporary understanding of artificial and other intelligences ? and in making practical, informed recommendations about how to regulate and/or adopt AI in our learning, work, and most intimate lives. *Normalization and Its Discontents* The concept of normalcy is paradoxical. It entails the statistically average that is at the same time a moral imperative, a completely ordinary state that is nonetheless much to be desired, a cultural ideal. Moreover, the normal often functions as the ideal even when it is not numerically average. How does the concept of normalcy govern notions of human life, and when doesn?t it? What are the structures and systems that keep it in place, in realms as disparate as the aesthetic, socioeconomic, psychological, physiological, political, spiritual, and ethical? What, if anything, does the historical knowledge of its recent invention ? and vigorous social rejections ? enable? *Please see the attached pdf files for more information about these grantmaking areas, including project examples, as well as eligible fields of study.* *Pre-Proposal Instructions:* Please submit as one combined pdf labeled with PI?s *Lastname, Firstname*: 1. A one- to two-page letter of intent that clearly state the subject area (Unruly Intelligences or Normalization and Its Discontents), a project description, the project?s goals, its potential impact, and the fitness of the PI/grant team for the proposed work. 2. CV (not biosketch) of the PI to *limitedsubs@uw.edu * by *5:00 PM Wednesday, November 19, 2025*. If given the go-ahead by the limited submissions review committee, registrations are due to the sponsor 12/1/2025 and concept notes are due 2/17/2026. A member of the Office of Corporate and Foundation Relations will assist applicants with their registration. Other open limited submissions opportunities, as well as the limited submissions review committee review and selection process, are here: *http://depts.washington.edu/research/funding/limited-submissions *. Please feel free to email us at *limitedsubs@uw.edu * with questions or information on any limited submission opportunities that should be but are not already listed on that page. If you are interested in other private funding opportunities, visit the *Corporate and Foundation funding opportunities .* -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ssnet_list at u.washington.edu Mon Nov 3 14:56:54 2025 From: ssnet_list at u.washington.edu (Olivia Banner via Ssnet_list) Date: Mon Nov 3 15:07:46 2025 Subject: [Ssnet_list] [S+T at UW]Unruly intelligences and Normalization and Its Discontents: Concepts for Limited Subs: Updated Mellon Foundation Call for Concepts In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Hi everyone, CREATE ? but me, in particular ? would be happy to support an application for either of these two concepts. Reach out to me if you?d like to talk more. All best, Olivia -- Olivia Banner, PhD Director of Strategy and Operations, CREATE Affiliate Member, Disability Studies Program University of Washington, Seattle (206) 685-1393 Google Scholar profile From: Monika Sengul-Jones via Society + Technology at UW Date: Monday, November 3, 2025 at 2:34?PM To: Monika Sengul-Jones via Society + Technology at UW , ssnet_list@u.washington.edu Cc: Monika Sengul-Jones Subject: [S+T at UW]Unruly intelligences and Normalization and Its Discontents: Concepts for Limited Subs: Updated Mellon Foundation Call for Concepts Apologies for cross-posting. Hey everyone, For those of you on this list who have faculty appointments, note the opportunity below to submit Mellon Foundation proposals for internal consideration on two provocative themes: "unruly intelligences" and "normalization and its discontents." Yours, Monika ---------- Forwarded message --------- From: OR Limited Submissions > Date: Monday, November 3, 2025 at 10:12?AM Subject: REVISED Limited Submission: Updated Mellon Foundation Call for Concepts UPDATE: The lead Principal Investigator (PI) must be a faculty member and/or dean in a program or department in the humanities or humanistic social sciences; Co-PIs can come from other departments. Sponsor: Mellon Foundation Program: 2026 Call for Concepts: ?Unruly Intelligences? and ?Normalization and Its Discontents? https://www.mellon.org/article/higher-learning-open-call-for-concepts-2026 Award amount: $250,000 - $500,000, with durations of up to four years Number of applications UW can put forward: 9 (3 for Seattle Campus, 3 for Bothell Campus, 3 for Tacoma Campus) OR internal deadline: 11/19/2025 Sponsor deadline: Register up to 9 concepts by UW (3 per campus): 12/01/2025; Concept Note Submission: 2/17/2026 Eligibility: The lead Principal Investigator (PI) must be a faculty member and/or dean in a program or department in the humanities or humanistic social sciences; Co-PIs can come from other departments. Program Description: Higher Learning?s Open Call for Concepts supports inquiry into issues of vital social, cultural, and historical import. Projects should engage teams of scholars and/or students, and have visible, enduring impact at the institution. The Mellon Higher Learning team will review all submissions and invite a small number of the most promising concepts to be developed into full proposals for potential grant funding.?? This funding opportunity is overseen by Mellon?s Higher Learning program. Applications must be demonstrably grounded in the humanities and led by scholars in the humanities and humanistic social sciences. Experimental methodologies, interdisciplinary and community collaboration, and pathways to informing campus and/or wider policies and practices are welcome. The Mellon Foundation invites institutions of higher education to submit applications for research and/or curricular projects focused on either of the following two areas: Unruly Intelligences The emergence of generative AI has triggered a firestorm of techno-utopian promises and apocalyptic predictions alike. With so much at stake, the humanities have an urgent role to play in shaping contemporary understanding of artificial and other intelligences ? and in making practical, informed recommendations about how to regulate and/or adopt AI in our learning, work, and most intimate lives. Normalization and Its Discontents The concept of normalcy is paradoxical. It entails the statistically average that is at the same time a moral imperative, a completely ordinary state that is nonetheless much to be desired, a cultural ideal. Moreover, the normal often functions as the ideal even when it is not numerically average. How does the concept of normalcy govern notions of human life, and when doesn?t it? What are the structures and systems that keep it in place, in realms as disparate as the aesthetic, socioeconomic, psychological, physiological, political, spiritual, and ethical? What, if anything, does the historical knowledge of its recent invention ? and vigorous social rejections ? enable? Please see the attached pdf files for more information about these grantmaking areas, including project examples, as well as eligible fields of study. Pre-Proposal Instructions: Please submit as one combined pdf labeled with PI?s Lastname, Firstname: 1. A one- to two-page letter of intent that clearly state the subject area (Unruly Intelligences or Normalization and Its Discontents), a project description, the project?s goals, its potential impact, and the fitness of the PI/grant team for the proposed work. 2. CV (not biosketch) of the PI to limitedsubs@uw.edu by 5:00 PM Wednesday, November 19, 2025. If given the go-ahead by the limited submissions review committee, registrations are due to the sponsor 12/1/2025 and concept notes are due 2/17/2026. A member of the Office of Corporate and Foundation Relations will assist applicants with their registration. Other open limited submissions opportunities, as well as the limited submissions review committee review and selection process, are here: http://depts.washington.edu/research/funding/limited-submissions. Please feel free to email us at limitedsubs@uw.edu with questions or information on any limited submission opportunities that should be but are not already listed on that page. If you are interested in other private funding opportunities, visit the Corporate and Foundation funding opportunities. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ssnet_list at u.washington.edu Mon Nov 3 15:23:52 2025 From: ssnet_list at u.washington.edu (Monika Sengul-Jones via Ssnet_list) Date: Mon Nov 3 16:39:09 2025 Subject: [Ssnet_list] Is the Columbia River an 'organic machine'? (Event details below) In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: *Apologies for cross-posting. * Hey everyone, Last summer, I visited Lake Entiat, formed by the Rocky Reach Dam -- one of more than 450 dams in the Columbia River Basin. Beside the lake, transformers crackled with electricity that serves seven million people. Energy made from waterfalls -- it's poetic, written like that. And like other enormous technological projects built on the force of water, the river and the dam are flashpoints for competing ways of living. This tension seems, to me, to run through historian Richard White?s important book *The Organic Machine: The Remaking of the Columbia River*. And now, this Friday, Nov. 7, at 2:30 PM in Allen Library North, Room 485, you can meet Richard White (History, Stanford) thirty years after the book's publication for conversation about environmental humanities with Jennifer O'Neal (University of Oregon), Nathan Roberts (History, UW Seattle), Jennifer Seltz (History, Western Washington University), and Coll Thrush (History, UBC), moderated by Margaret O?Mara (History, UW Seattle). Add to your calendar See below for details, and thanks to Jess Cavalari (History, UW Seattle) for the heads up. Yours, Monika Link: https://calendar.washington.edu/The-Organic-Machine-at-30-feat-Richard-White/E191279267 >>> All are welcome to attend this forum celebrating the 30th anniversary of Richard White's landmark book, The Organic Machine: the Remaking of the Columbia River, featuring Dr. White in conversation with a panel of environmental humanities scholars. Published in 1995, The Organic Machine helped launch a new way of writing environmental history?one that bridges nature and culture, science and story, ecology and economy. Thirty years later, its influence endures across disciplines. Beyond commemoration, this event seeks to reenergize the interdisciplinary connections among scholars and students engaged in environmental studies across the University of Washington. It will highlight the UW?s longstanding role as a collegial and innovative center for environmental thought?where ideas that helped shape The Organic Machine first took root. -- -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: THE ORGANIC MACHINE FORUM (1).pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 389558 bytes Desc: not available URL: From ssnet_list at u.washington.edu Tue Nov 4 11:04:20 2025 From: ssnet_list at u.washington.edu (Monika Sengul-Jones via Ssnet_list) Date: Tue Nov 4 11:49:32 2025 Subject: [Ssnet_list] You are invited to an STSS Mixer | Tues. Nov. 25, 2025 | 3:30 PM | Simpson Center Message-ID: *Apologies for cross-posting. Also, please share! * Hey everyone, Help us spread the word to the STSS curious. S+T at UW is hosting an STSS Fall Mixer on Tuesday, November 25, 2025, at 3:30 PM at the Simpson Center for the Humanities (CMU 202) in Seattle. Register ! Add to your calendar! The theme is ?*Encounters*.? STSS faculty, staff, and students from UW Seattle, Bothell, Tacoma, and the School of Medicine are invited to connect, mingle, and share what they?ve been doing with STS across research, teaching, mentorship, and leadership work. We are still deciding if we should make the mixer hybrid to best include all our colleagues from across our campuses. *We want to hear from you about that, * and more. We?ve also got a table reserved for a no-host drink at a local brewery afterward. Looking forward to seeing you there. Yours, Monika Sengul-Jones, PhD and on behalf of David Ribes (HCDE, UW Seattle), interim STSS Director, 2025-26 Society + Technology at UW www.societyandtechnology.uw.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ssnet_list at u.washington.edu Tue Nov 4 16:35:52 2025 From: ssnet_list at u.washington.edu (Adam Visokay via Ssnet_list) Date: Tue Nov 4 20:18:42 2025 Subject: [Ssnet_list] Winter Quarter 2026: Power, Privilege, and Statistics Message-ID: Hi all, My name is Adam Visokay, a candidate in the Sociology department and also working on my STS certificate mentored by Professor David Ribes. I wanted to share some information about a fantastic course that one of my advisors in the Sociology Department is offering this Winter quarter. A flyer is attached with more information below. I took the course last year for its first iteration and found it extremely helpful for my research, and also just very interesting! If you have any questions, please let me know. Best, Adam -- Adam Visokay (he/they) PhD Student, University of Washington Affiliated student, Max Planck Institute *Homepage: *avisokay.github.io -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: CSSS 594 SOC 590 2026 flyer.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 775113 bytes Desc: not available URL: From ssnet_list at u.washington.edu Thu Nov 6 16:18:42 2025 From: ssnet_list at u.washington.edu (Monika Sengul-Jones via Ssnet_list) Date: Thu Nov 6 16:55:20 2025 Subject: [Ssnet_list] Signals & Society | Love, Law, and LLMs | Monday, Nov. 10 at 5:30 PM Message-ID: *Apologies for cross-posting* Hey everyone, Next in the independent -- and very cool -- Signals & Society series features Jevan Hutson (Law, UW Seattle) this Monday, Nov. 10 at 5:30 PM at Old Stove Gardens in Ballard (1550 NW 49th Street, Seattle 98107), co-hosted by Ryan Calo (Law, UW Seattle). Details below. See you there? [image: image.png] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image.png Type: image/png Size: 243646 bytes Desc: not available URL: From ssnet_list at u.washington.edu Mon Nov 10 10:19:39 2025 From: ssnet_list at u.washington.edu (Monika Sengul-Jones via Ssnet_list) Date: Mon Nov 10 11:16:19 2025 Subject: [Ssnet_list] Signals & Society | Love, Law, and LLMs | Monday, Nov. 10 at 5:30 PM In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: *Apologies for cross-posting *Hey everyone, a reminder this is happening today in Ballard. Details below. Yours, Monika On Thu, Nov 6, 2025 at 4:18?PM Monika Sengul-Jones wrote: > *Apologies for cross-posting* > > Hey everyone, > > Next in the independent -- and very cool -- Signals & Society series > > features Jevan Hutson (Law, UW Seattle) this Monday, Nov. 10 at 5:30 PM at > Old Stove Gardens in Ballard (1550 NW 49th Street, Seattle 98107), > co-hosted by Ryan Calo (Law, UW Seattle). Details below. See you there? > > > [image: image.png] > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image.png Type: image/png Size: 243646 bytes Desc: not available URL: From ssnet_list at u.washington.edu Thu Nov 13 09:19:06 2025 From: ssnet_list at u.washington.edu (Monika Sengul-Jones via Ssnet_list) Date: Thu Nov 13 09:23:08 2025 Subject: [Ssnet_list] At the Bioethics Table with Implantable Technologies | Dec. 4, 2025 at 3:30 PM Message-ID: [image: image.png] *Apologies for cross-posting.* Hey everyone, On Thursday, December 4, 2025 at 3:30 PM, Society + Technology at UW heads down to the Department of Bioethics & Humanities at UW Medicine for an afternoon salon devoted to thinking with and about implantable technologies. >From cardiac devices and contraceptive implants to neural interfaces and experimental sensors, technologies that live in or under the skin raise complicated questions about consent, autonomy, commercial interests, and more. *At the Bioethics Table with Implantable Technologies* will bring together philosophers, sociologists, policy experts, artists, and clinical practitioners to a long table for an enriching discussion--and we may even have edible implants. Stay tuned for the list of speakers, but in the meantime, register now to join us ! -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image.png Type: image/png Size: 576028 bytes Desc: not available URL: From ssnet_list at u.washington.edu Mon Nov 17 15:40:31 2025 From: ssnet_list at u.washington.edu (Monika Sengul-Jones via Ssnet_list) Date: Mon Nov 17 18:54:20 2025 Subject: [Ssnet_list] "Bringing serendipity back into the scientific process" | Maxim Ziatdinov | Nov. 19, 2025 11 am In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: *Apologies for cross-posting.* Hey everyone, On behalf of Kelly Olenyik (IPhD, UW Seattle), I'm letting you know about a talk on Wednesday, Nov. 19 from 11:00 AM - 12:00 PM in Gould Hall, Room 322, on how to set up a "modern autonomous [scientific] laboratory" using an open-source, multi-agent AI framework that, to a stranger, could sound like a tutorial on autonomous robot debate matches. Of course, the vantage of the stranger can be illuminating. You may also find that learning to use AI to speed up the research process?and to research gaps more creatively?will spark your own creativity. Details below (you can email Kelly at olen@uw.edu to learn more and access the paper). Yours, Monika Sengul-Jones www.societyandtechnology.uw.edu Speaking Session (UW community welcome) AI Core Seminar | UW Molecular Engineering Materials Center | Dr. Maxim Ziatdinov, Wednesday, Nov. 19, 2025 11:00 AM ? 12:00 PM, Gould Hall, GLD 322 In this talk, Maxim will introduceSciLink, an open-source, multi-agent AI framework designed to bring serendipity back into the scientific process. SciLink connects experimental data, novelty detection, and theoretical modeling in a fully automated loop. It uses a hybrid AI approach: machine learning models handle the quantitative analysis, while large language models take care of higher-level reasoning. Together, these agents turn raw microscopy and spectroscopy data into testable scientific claims?and then score those claims for novelty by comparing them to the existing literature. Maxim will walk through examples of SciLink in action, from atomic-resolution imaging to hyperspectral datasets, and show how it can even incorporate real-time input from human experts. His talk will highlight how this system doesn?t just make research faster?it makes it more open-ended, more creative, and more likely to uncover the unexpected. About the speaker Dr. Maxim Ziatdinov is a senior research scientist at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL), where he leads cutting-edge efforts at the intersection of artificial intelligence and materials science. With a Ph.D. in engineering science from Tokyo Institute of Technology, Dr. Ziatdinov has spent over a decade advancing autonomous experimentation and machine learning-driven discovery in microscopy, spectroscopy, and chemical synthesis. His work focuses on integrating domain-informed AI models into scientific instrumentation to enable real-time data analysis and closed-loop control. Dr. Ziatdinov is the creator of several influential opensource software tools?includingAtomAI,GPax, andpyroVED? that have accelerated progress in deep learning, Bayesian optimization, and invariant representation learning for physical sciences. His contributions have been recognized through numerous high-impact publications and a U.S. patent for AI-guided experimentation. At the forefront of human-AI collaboration, Dr. Ziatdinov is passionate about building reproducible, intelligent systems that transform how science is conducted. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ssnet_list at u.washington.edu Tue Nov 18 18:07:11 2025 From: ssnet_list at u.washington.edu (Monika Sengul-Jones via Ssnet_list) Date: Tue Nov 18 18:09:22 2025 Subject: [Ssnet_list] Can tech reduce the energy costs of tech? | Signals & Society | Figurehead Brewery at 5:30 PM | Mon. Dec. 1, 2025 Message-ID: Hey everyone, On behalf of Divya Kothari and Ryan Calo, I?m happy to share the final Signals & Society event of the year. On Monday, December 1, 2025, at 5:30 PM, head to Figurehead Brewing in Fremont (3513 Stone Way N, Seattle, WA 98103) for a pint and a conversation with Hansi Singh, CEO of Planette.ai, on technology, power, water, and carbon math. Signals & Society is an independent, public-facing, traveling series devoted to exploring how technology shapes?and is shaped by?society. The event is public; no registration required. Please share widely with colleagues, students, and friends who might be interested. Apologies for cross-posting! Yours, Monika -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ssnet_list at u.washington.edu Tue Nov 18 18:34:51 2025 From: ssnet_list at u.washington.edu (Monika Sengul-Jones via Ssnet_list) Date: Tue Nov 18 18:41:26 2025 Subject: [Ssnet_list] Why is technology so hard to regulate? | Join Ryan Calo at Ada's on Dec. 8 at 6 PM Message-ID: Hey everyone, I'm writing on behalf of Ryan Calo (Law, UW Seattle) to invite you to a conversation about the frictions between law and technology in honor of the launch of his new book, *Law & Technology: A Methodical Approach* (Oxford University Press), on *Monday, December 8, at 6 PM at* *Ada?s Technical Books & Caf?* (425 15th Ave E, Seattle, WA 98112). Why is technology hard to regulate? What can be done about this? Join us for a cool walk-through of a framework to understand and address legal challenges posed by technologies at Seattle's geekiest bookstore with UW's leading scholar of technology and law. No registration required. Please feel free to share widely with colleagues, students, and friends who might be interested. Apologies for cross-posting! Yours, Monika Monika Sengul-Jones, PhD (she/her) www.societyandtechnology.uw.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Ada's final.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 309861 bytes Desc: not available URL: From ssnet_list at u.washington.edu Sun Nov 23 20:23:49 2025 From: ssnet_list at u.washington.edu (Monika Sengul-Jones via Ssnet_list) Date: Sun Nov 23 20:38:55 2025 Subject: [Ssnet_list] Happening this Tuesday: You are invited to an STSS Mixer | Tues. Nov. 25, 2025 | 3:30 PM | Simpson Center In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <52EE4A69-5277-4F74-A4B6-8E23B3666A02@uw.edu> An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ssnet_list at u.washington.edu Mon Nov 24 15:21:04 2025 From: ssnet_list at u.washington.edu (Monika Sengul-Jones via Ssnet_list) Date: Mon Nov 24 16:32:17 2025 Subject: [Ssnet_list] Join our online S+T at UW First Monday Mixer! | Monday, Dec. 1, 2025 at 12:30 PM Message-ID: Hey everyone, Two updates about mixers this fall: *Join our online S+T at UW First Monday Mixer | Monday, Dec. 1, 2025 at 12:30 PM* As you navigate that end-of-Autumn-quarter schedule, enjoy the convenience and ease of an online-only lunch break mixer to connect. We'll do introductions and have a few curiosity-stoking prompts/questions on Monday, Dec. 1, 2025 from 12:30-1:25 PM. Add the online mixer to your calendar ; Zoom link below. The reading-focused First Monday STSS Reading Group programming will resume on Monday, Jan. 5, 2026, with host Pelle Tracey (Information, UW Seattle). Reach out to me at mmjones@uw.edu to get added to the email invitation list! --- *Join us tomorrow for the in-person mixer, Encounters | STSS Research Mixer at Simpson Center (CMU 202)* Tomorrow, Tuesday, Nov. 25, 2025, join us from 3:30?5:00 PM at the Simpson Center for the Humanities (CMU 202) for an in-person mixer. All UW faculty, staff, and students from Seattle, Bothell, Tacoma, and the School of Medicine are warmly invited. We'll have an optional happy hour on the Ave after. Register here Looking forward to seeing you soon -- whether it's online or in-person or both. Until then, yours, Monika *Apologies for cross-posting! * *Link for Online First Monday Mixer | Dec. 1, 2025 at 12:30 PM* Monika Sengul-Jones is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting. Join Zoom Meeting https://washington.zoom.us/j/93579665127 Meeting ID: 935 7966 5127 --- One tap mobile +12532158782,,93579665127# US (Tacoma) +12063379723,,93579665127# US (Seattle) --- Join by SIP ? 93579665127@zoomcrc.com Join instructions https://washington.zoom.us/meetings/93579665127/invitations?signature=u2UB6eR3FsW83dWAIwhMSEKJNb8D1sLuKjYdwd3_VUk -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: