• Megan Pierce and The Joker

    Cordier Auditorium

    MU senior, Megan Pierce shares a 10-year journey of collecting memorabilia of the DC Comic's villain, The Joker. As of 2025, Meganโ€™s collection was officially recognized by Guinness World Records, as being the "Largest collection of the Joker memorabilia.

  • Life Imitates Art

    Cordier Auditorium

    Kate Black and Bob Haluska A look backstage at the community theatre experience. Travel with Kate Black and Bob Haluska through auditions, casting, rehearsal, and performance. Consider how the work resonates over time.

  • Protecting What Matters

    Cordier Auditorium

    Andrea Warnke โ€˜79 was associate director of the ACLU of Vermont. She was recognized with the organizationโ€™s highest honor, which now bears her name. She is active with the organization Third Act, joining her concerns for the environment with her civil liberties background to safeguard our climate and democracy.

  • Howard Zinn’s “Marx in SoHo”

    Cordier Auditorium

    Marx in Soho is Howard Zinnโ€™s one-person play in which Karl Marx returns to modern-day New Yorkโ€™s Soho to defend his ideas, critique contemporary capitalism, and show the human side of a figure often reduced to caricature.

  • Appeals on Wheels

    Manchester University 604 E College Ave, North Manchester, IN, United States

    โ€œAppeals on Wheelsโ€ is an outreach program of the Indiana Court of Appeals that brings live appellate oral arguments to communities across the state. By holding sessions in high schools, colleges, and civic venuesโ€”and engaging audiences in Q&A discussionsโ€”the Court offers the public a rare, firsthand look at how an intermediate appellate court works. The program promotes transparency, strengthens civic education, and helps citizens understand how appellate decision-making differs from the trial court proceedings they may be more familiar with.

  • Tom Nielson – Resistance as Love

    Cordier Auditorium

    Tom Neilson is an award-winning folk musician and activist whose songsโ€”rooted in his upbringing on a dairy farm and shaped by decades of international work in education, public health, and community organizingโ€”give voice to movements for justice around the world. He draws on experiences from Colombia to Kenya, Somalia to Nicaragua, weaving humor, political insight, and storytelling into music that has been performed in more than twenty countries. Tom combines art and activism through concerts, residencies, and community engagement, offering audiences both sharp social critique and a generous dose of wit.

  • Mike Staudenmaier – White, Black, Brown

    Cordier Auditorium

    The global fame of Bad Bunny has raised popular awareness of Puerto Rico and its people, millions of whom live in the United States. In Chicago, the Puerto Rican community has played a pivotal role in shifting understandings of identity and belonging over the past century. This talk will demonstrate how Chicago and the whole Midwest have generated elements of culture and politics that helped pave the way for Bad Bunny's Super Bowl moment, and it will suggest a possible future path for Puerto Ricans and their relationship with the USA.