WKU Events
Tuesday, February 11th
- Time: All Day
The WKU Apartments on Kentucky Street offer premiere, fully furnished two-bedroom and one-bedroom options for students with more than 60 credit hours who desire an apartment experience while living on the Hill.
Learn More: wku.edu/housing/apartments
- Location: Both Cravens Library & The Commons
- Time: All Day
- Location: Gary Ransdell Hall #2068
- Time: 11:00am - 1:00pm
Come meet our Military Student Services staff and learn how we support our military-connected students. While visiting and touring our space, grab some refreshments.
- Location: Helm Library 3001
- Time: 2:00pm - 3:00pm
Say goodbye to too many bookmarks and manually formatting your citations! This workshop guides you through installing and using Zotero to collect and organize references, and integrating it in Microsoft Word. Zotero is free and seamlessly works with most internet browsers.
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Register in advance for Tuesday
- BYOL - Bring your own laptop
Learn the rudiments of Zotero: that includes downloading the software, organizing and accessing your resources, inserting your bibliography citations into your document, and creating citations for various media, such as YouTube videos, images, and podcasts.
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This event is part of International Love Data Week 2025 with WKU Libraries.
Take a minute to think about who owns data compared to who uses data. Different groups - like researchers, the government, companies, or organizations - may collect data. They could own it, share it, publish it online, or combine it. This year's Love Data Week wants us to ask 'Whose Data is it Anyway?' This helps us remember to think about where the data came from before using it. Check out the Libraries for great workshops all week long and daily events!
- Location: COHH 3119 or Zoom
- Time: 4:00pm
Have you ever wondered what some of the benefits are to studying mathematics at WKU? Are you unsure of what to do after graduation? A great resource for answers to these questions are the people who have been in your shoes before! In the Pi Mu Epsilon Math Alumni Speaker Series (PME MASS), WKU Mathematics alumni speak about their career paths and how studying mathematics at WKU has been beneficial to them. Each event ends with a Q&A session.
We are pleased to announce our first speaker of the semester, Ryan St. Clair, a Sustainable Agricultural Sciences Promoter with the Peace Corps. Ryan will be speaking to us from Paraguay via Zoom on Tuesday, February 11, at 4:00 PM. You have the option of joining us in person (in COHH 3119, where light refreshments will be served) or via Zoom (https://wku.zoom.us/j/98500508865).
- Location: Helm Library 3001
- Time: 4:00pm - 7:30pm
In spirit of Love Data Week, join us for an evening movie screening of Moneyball. Starring Brad Pitt, Jonah Hill, and Philip Seymour Hoffman, follow the true story of Oakland A's general manager Billy Beane's successful attempt to put together a baseball club on a budget by employing computer-generated analysis to draft his players.
- Register at https://libcal.wku.edu/event/14044008
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This event is part of International Love Data Week 2025 with WKU Libraries.
Take a minute to think about who owns data compared to who uses data. Different groups - like researchers, the government, companies, or organizations - may collect data. They could own it, share it, publish it online, or combine it. This year's Love Data Week wants us to ask 'Whose Data is it Anyway?' This helps us remember to think about where the data came from before using it. Check out the Libraries for great workshops all week long and daily events!
- Location: The Capitol Arts Center (416 E Main Ave.)
- Time: 6:30pm - 8:30pm
O Pioneer reckons with and redefines the American pioneer.
This documentary follows three West Virginians—a blacksmith, a seamstress, and a hospital chaplain—as they creatively navigate hardship and call us to champion the pioneer within.
Narrated by lyricist and musician Kaïa Kater, the film weaves verité moments with archival footage, poetic vignettes, and dream-like animation—as Tim Hibbs, Nellie Rose Gundersen Davis, and James Morley humbly answer their calls to pioneer a way forward.
Free tickets are available at capitolbg.org. After the screening, a Q&A with filmmakers will be offered.