- LocationDowntown Bryan
- DescriptionMaroon & White Night provides an opportunity to meet up with colleagues to network, socialize and collaborate. Each month a different area on campus will be highlighted to share their impact and potentially inspire cross-campus collaboration. The event is FREE to attend and FREE PARKING is provided in the Roy Kelly Parking Garage. Many businesses are offering incentives and discounts. Make sure to bring your ID or business cards for verification. Visit https://www.bryantx.gov/maroonwhitenight/ (https://www.bryantx.gov/maroonwhitenight/)for a full list of entertainment and incentives being offered.
- Websitehttps://calendar.tamu.edu/live/events/358132-maroon-white-night
- CategoriesAcademic Calendar, Arts & Entertainment, Campus Life, General Interest
More from Upcoming Events
- Sep 2012:00 PMEyewitness to Conflict: WWII Prints Commemorating the 80th Anniversary of Victory in EuropeExhibition on Display: July 31–Aug. 25, 2025Summer Hours | May 13–Aug. 25, 2025Tues.–Fri. 9 a.m.–5:30 p.m.; Sat. Noon–6 p.m; Closed Sun.–Mon.Regular Hours | Beginning Aug. 26, 2025Tues.–Fri. 9 a.m.–8 p.m.; Sat.–Sun. Noon–6 p.m; Closed Mon. Comprised of lithographs, woodcuts and etchings, this exhibition brings together powerful works that reflect the vital role artists played—and continue to play—in shaping the public consciousness of war and memory. These prints serve as both documentary records and poetic interpretations, capturing not only the devastation and resilience of people and places but also the emotional landscape of a world transformed by conflict. Drawing on Francis Brennan's 1942 call that the American people needed their artists "to charge them with the grave responsibility of spelling out their anger, their grief, their greatness and their justice," the exhibition honors those who responded through the enduring medium of printmaking—bearing witness, telling stories that history books cannot and offering deeply personal visions of collective experience.
- Sep 239:00 AMEyewitness to Conflict: WWII Prints Commemorating the 80th Anniversary of Victory in EuropeExhibition on Display: July 31–Aug. 25, 2025Summer Hours | May 13–Aug. 25, 2025Tues.–Fri. 9 a.m.–5:30 p.m.; Sat. Noon–6 p.m; Closed Sun.–Mon.Regular Hours | Beginning Aug. 26, 2025Tues.–Fri. 9 a.m.–8 p.m.; Sat.–Sun. Noon–6 p.m; Closed Mon. Comprised of lithographs, woodcuts and etchings, this exhibition brings together powerful works that reflect the vital role artists played—and continue to play—in shaping the public consciousness of war and memory. These prints serve as both documentary records and poetic interpretations, capturing not only the devastation and resilience of people and places but also the emotional landscape of a world transformed by conflict. Drawing on Francis Brennan's 1942 call that the American people needed their artists "to charge them with the grave responsibility of spelling out their anger, their grief, their greatness and their justice," the exhibition honors those who responded through the enduring medium of printmaking—bearing witness, telling stories that history books cannot and offering deeply personal visions of collective experience.
- Sep 246:00 PMTurning Impossible into "I'm Possible"—A Night of Comedy, Courage and Conversations that MatterPart comedy set, part life-saving education, this event offers hope, resources and real talk for Aggies who want to take care of themselves and each other. In 2004, Joshua Rivedal moved from New Jersey to New York City at the age of 20 to tackle the world of fame, fortune and the Broadway stage. Eight years later and through a series of remarkable life events, Joshua reinvented himself as a mission-driven international public speaker/educator, author, playwright, standup comic, freelance book editor and ghostwriter, curriculum developer, and educator. As a public speaker and educator, his primary focus is on suicide prevention and mental health; speeches and seminars on his experiences as a survivor of suicide loss, youth suicide prevention, workplace mental health and cultivating resilience—often (but not always) paired with standup comedy. Through his partnership with Skookum Hill, a publishing, consultancy, and production firm he creates content that inspires, educates, entertains, and transforms. As founder and creative director of The i'Mpossible Project, he provides advocacy, entertainment, seminars and peer-to-peer education on suicide prevention, mental health and storytelling.
- Sep 27All dayTransit Gameday Bus ServiceFor Gameday Route information, visit transport.tamu.edu/busroutes (http://transport.tamu.edu/busroutes).
- Sep 2712:00 PMEyewitness to Conflict: WWII Prints Commemorating the 80th Anniversary of Victory in EuropeExhibition on Display: July 31–Aug. 25, 2025Summer Hours | May 13–Aug. 25, 2025Tues.–Fri. 9 a.m.–5:30 p.m.; Sat. Noon–6 p.m; Closed Sun.–Mon.Regular Hours | Beginning Aug. 26, 2025Tues.–Fri. 9 a.m.–8 p.m.; Sat.–Sun. Noon–6 p.m; Closed Mon. Comprised of lithographs, woodcuts and etchings, this exhibition brings together powerful works that reflect the vital role artists played—and continue to play—in shaping the public consciousness of war and memory. These prints serve as both documentary records and poetic interpretations, capturing not only the devastation and resilience of people and places but also the emotional landscape of a world transformed by conflict. Drawing on Francis Brennan's 1942 call that the American people needed their artists "to charge them with the grave responsibility of spelling out their anger, their grief, their greatness and their justice," the exhibition honors those who responded through the enduring medium of printmaking—bearing witness, telling stories that history books cannot and offering deeply personal visions of collective experience.
- Sep 309:00 AMEyewitness to Conflict: WWII Prints Commemorating the 80th Anniversary of Victory in EuropeExhibition on Display: July 31–Aug. 25, 2025Summer Hours | May 13–Aug. 25, 2025Tues.–Fri. 9 a.m.–5:30 p.m.; Sat. Noon–6 p.m; Closed Sun.–Mon.Regular Hours | Beginning Aug. 26, 2025Tues.–Fri. 9 a.m.–8 p.m.; Sat.–Sun. Noon–6 p.m; Closed Mon. Comprised of lithographs, woodcuts and etchings, this exhibition brings together powerful works that reflect the vital role artists played—and continue to play—in shaping the public consciousness of war and memory. These prints serve as both documentary records and poetic interpretations, capturing not only the devastation and resilience of people and places but also the emotional landscape of a world transformed by conflict. Drawing on Francis Brennan's 1942 call that the American people needed their artists "to charge them with the grave responsibility of spelling out their anger, their grief, their greatness and their justice," the exhibition honors those who responded through the enduring medium of printmaking—bearing witness, telling stories that history books cannot and offering deeply personal visions of collective experience.