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September 2025
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Monday, November 3, 2025
- 8:00 AMVisit the PASSHE HOSTED SOURCEPOINT Website for Monthly Training OpportunitiesEvent Name: PASSHESOURCEPOINTTRAINING Event Locator: 2023-ADADAR Various Dates for PASSHE Hosted SourcePoint Training Opportunities Visit the PASSHE HOSTED SOURCEPOINT Website for Monthly Training Opportunities. Sessions are offered multiple times throughout the month. Click to locate a date that is convenient for you
- 8:00 AMWCU Overnight & Non-Overnight Travel Forms Training VideosEvent Name: WCUTRAVELTRAININGVIDEOS Event Locator: 2024-ADCHDM Step by step instructions to complete the Overnight and Non-Overnight Travel Forms/Vouchers as well as saving/printing them. Non-Overnight Travel Training.mp4 Overnight Travel Training.mp4
- 4:30 PM1h 30mEthnic Studies Film Series: "After the Mayflower"Event Name: Ethnic Studies Film Series Event Locator: 2025-ADGNFD Ethnic Studies Film Series: “After the Mayflower” Monday, November 3 4:30pm – 6:00 pm Sykes Student Union, Room 254 Episode 1 of the award-winning PBS documentary “We Shall Remain America - Through Native Eyes” about the first contact of the Wampanoag people with the Pilgrim settlers arriving on the Mayflower beginning in 1621. This contact is exemplified by the quote my Metacom (Wampanoag sachem) as told by John Easton (deputy Governor of Rhode Island in 1675): “The Wampanoag had been the first in doing good to the English and the English were the first in doing wrong.” Sponsoring Departments: Institute of Race and Ethnic Studies, Department of Anthropology & Sociology
- 4:30 PM1h 30mEthnic Studies Film Series: "After the Mayflower"Event Name: Ethnic Studies Film Series Event Locator: 2025-ADGNFD Ethnic Studies Film Series: “After the Mayflower” Monday, November 3 4:30pm – 6:00 pm Sykes Student Union, Room 254 Episode 1 of the award-winning PBS documentary “We Shall Remain America - Through Native Eyes” about the first contact of the Wampanoag people with the Pilgrim settlers arriving on the Mayflower beginning in 1621. This contact is exemplified by the quote my Metacom (Wampanoag sachem) as told by John Easton (deputy Governor of Rhode Island in 1675): “The Wampanoag had been the first in doing good to the English and the English were the first in doing wrong.” Sponsoring Departments: Institute of Race and Ethnic Studies, Department of Anthropology & Sociology