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At LTU, students, faculty, and our community come together to explore ideas in open forums with speakers and researchers who have made their own marks on our cultural and educational frameworks.
This lecture series invites the campus community to join us as we explore the relationships between the arts and sciences through a dedicated annual theme. Our three college departments — Math and Computer Science; Humanities, Social Sciences, and Communication; and Natural Sciences — invite internal and external speakers to help us discover links between each other’s disciplines through seminars, lectures, and roundtable discussions.
Each event is free and open to the public. Pizza will be served at 12:15 prior to the event.
The Walker L. Cisler lecture series, which is free and open to the public, was founded at Lawrence Technological University with a generous gift from the Holley Foundation.
Well known for his leadership of the Detroit Edison Company from 1954 to 1971, Walker L. Cisler enjoyed a career that spanned a lifetime of personal, professional, civic, and business accomplishments. As an international ambassador for the American electric utility industry, he worked closely with heads of state both here and abroad. As a tireless, dedicated humanitarian, he strived to improve the quality of life for people everywhere.
The Harold Hotelling Memorial Lecture Series was founded to honor an esteemed scholar and colleague. Harold Hotelling (1945 – 2009) joined Lawrence Tech as an associate professor of economics in 1989 and taught courses in business law, business ethics, constitutional law, urban social issues, law, and economics. Everyone who knew him benefited from his keen intellect, tireless devotion, quick wit, and wonderful sense of humor. This lecture series strives to continue that impact.
Idea Factory is a speaker series that showcases course-based research experiences conducted by faculty and students within the LTU community and beyond. The series is especially interested in how the course-based research model fosters diversity, inclusion, and academic rigor in the classroom.
Applications or suggestions for future symposia may be submitted to: bbhattach@ltu.edu
The Mathematics + Computer Science Seminar is a biweekly seminar highlighting research activities within the MCS Department at LTU.
Attendance is a requirement of “MCS 2111: MCS Seminar”
In Humanities, Social Sciences, and Communication, we explore what makes us uniquely human. Through ancient and modern texts, social norms, and communication, we uncover how these fields are essential to all careers and human endeavors.
In a world of programming, proofs, and unending figures and unfeeling facts, is there room for a touch of magic? Data drives discovery, innovation redefines intelligence, and when curiosity meets logic, mathematics can be miraculous.
Curiosity drives discovery in biology, chemistry, and physics, guiding us from molecular interactions to chemical reactions and the fundamental laws of nature. Explore what makes you curious.
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