We’ll boldly go …
A noon Monday Lunch and Learn on science fiction, the first of two presented this month by the Sullivan Museum and History Center, will lead this week’s campus activities schedule, which also includes several sessions related to criminal justice and law enforcement careers.
Science fiction enthusiasts Glennie Sewell and Joseph Cates will lead the noon to 1 p.m. Monday session, “Star Trek: From Science Fiction to Science Facts,” which will focus on the lasting resonance of “Star Trek,” the television show created by Gene Roddenberry, and what in the show has proven prescient or purely fantastical. The show first broadcast in 1966 and ran for three seasons; it has lived on in movies and television shows, conferences and games for 55 years.
March 9, 2021
By Adriana Aumen, College of Arts and Sciences
The international Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences (ACJS) has selected Faith Lutze, a Washington State University professor and expert in criminal justice, to receive the group’s prestigious Founder’s Award in recognition of “a career of providing substantial contributions to the Academy and to the discipline of criminal justice through education and research.”
A member of the WSU Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology faculty since 1995, Lutze will be honored at the ACJS annual meeting to be held virtually in April.
“Her career and commitment to criminal justice embodies the ACJS mission to transform justice through research, education, and practice,” said Frances Bernat, a Regents professor and associate dean at Texas A&M International University, in nominating Lutze for the award.
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