Please join the Catholic Student Association for our weekly celebration of Mass on campus! Enjoy the company of fellow CSA club members and Stan State students as we gather as one to participate in the highest form of Catholic prayer, the Mass! We would love to see you there, and please bring a friend!

Please join the Catholic Student Association for our weekly celebration of Mass on campus! Enjoy the company of fellow CSA club members and Stan State students as we gather as one to participate in the highest form of Catholic prayer, the Mass! We would love to see you there, and please bring a friend!

Come join the Faculty Mentor Program for a short campus tour! We understand that some have not stepped foot on the campus since the start of COVID-19. Please feel free to take this time to experience the locations and some brief history of Stanislaus State.

By registering for this event, you agree to adhere to the Stan State Campus Event Protocols. Failure to comply will result in loss of entry.

Colin in Black and White: A Facilitated Screening and Community Discussion

In honor of Black History Month, the campus community is invited to join a facilitated screening and dialogue of Colin in Black and White. The event features a viewing of select episodes and a guided discussion of topics related to the Black experience facilitated by Lisa Bonta Sumii, LCSW, CSW, CEO & Founder of AthMindset.

Attendees are encouraged, but not required, to view the full series available through Netflix prior to the event.

Rosemary and Paul Adalian noticed one another in what Paul calls the first class — at 8 a.m. — on the first day of school at the brand-new Stanislaus State campus in 1965. 

She sat in the front row of Sociology 201. He was in the back. 

“I saw this girl in the front and she was wearing a dress, and I thought, ‘Who in the heck wears a dress? This is college,’” Paul said. 

Someone who wore a plaid skirt, blue blazer, white gloves and hat to an all-girl Catholic high school two blocks from New York’s Times Square did. 

When history professor and professional musician Kim Nalley speaks or sings about the racism Black people have endured, she frequently makes people uncomfortable. That’s when she knows she is making a difference.

“Being uncomfortable, forcing yourself to see things differently and entertain the idea that you are not always right, that’s when you learn,” said the jazz and blues vocalist who teaches history at Cal State East Bay.