Hamline Events

Explore a calendar of upcoming activities at Hamline University. Find out more about each event, including the location, schedule, special guests, and registration or ticket information.

October 2024

Events listing

Prefer seeing upcoming Hamline events in a list format? Check out a few upcoming events below.

 

Dec 7
Saturday
2:00 pm - 3:30 pm
Sundin Music Hall

Please join us for a concert by the HU Orchestra, held at Sundin Music Hall.

Dec 8
Sunday
4:00 pm - 5:30 pm

Please join us for a concert from the Hamline University A Cappella Choir.

Dec 10
Tuesday
6:00 pm - 7:30 pm
Online

Join us for an online information session to learn more information about our Paralegal Certificate and Master in the Study of Law programs. 

Jan 14
Tuesday
3:00 pm - 4:00 pm
Online

Join us virtually for a Transfer Information Session! This webinar-style presentation will give you the opportunity to learn about the credit transfer process, scholarships, financial aid, and to find out how seamless your transition will be! At this event you will also learn what makes Hamline unique and how we support transfer students.

Mar 6
Thursday
7:30 pm - 9:30 pm
Tickets go on sale January 31

Two harlequins, two shepherds, and death share the stage in Edna St. Vincent Millay’s fanciful one-act. This poetic farce explores the morals of war, friendship, love, and boredom all in the span of 30 minutes! Harlequins Pierrot and Columbine lament their shiny decadence. Cothurnus wears the Masque of Tragedy. Friends Thyrsis and Corydon lose their lives in a make-believe battle. How does a play that was shaped and informed by the 20 million casualties during World War I speak to a world on edge over a century later?

Directed by Eden Fahy (Class of 2025) as part of their senior project in the Department of Performance, Production, and Community.

Mar 7
Friday
7:30 pm - 9:30 pm
Tickets go on sale January 31

Two harlequins, two shepherds, and death share the stage in Edna St. Vincent Millay’s fanciful one-act. This poetic farce explores the morals of war, friendship, love, and boredom all in the span of 30 minutes! Harlequins Pierrot and Columbine lament their shiny decadence. Cothurnus wears the Masque of Tragedy. Friends Thyrsis and Corydon lose their lives in a make-believe battle. How does a play that was shaped and informed by the 20 million casualties during World War I speak to a world on edge over a century later?

Directed by Eden Fahy (Class of 2025) as part of their senior project in the Department of Performance, Production, and Community.

Mar 8
Saturday
7:30 pm - 9:30 pm
Tickets go on sale January 31

Two harlequins, two shepherds, and death share the stage in Edna St. Vincent Millay’s fanciful one-act. This poetic farce explores the morals of war, friendship, love, and boredom all in the span of 30 minutes! Harlequins Pierrot and Columbine lament their shiny decadence. Cothurnus wears the Masque of Tragedy. Friends Thyrsis and Corydon lose their lives in a make-believe battle. How does a play that was shaped and informed by the 20 million casualties during World War I speak to a world on edge over a century later?

Directed by Eden Fahy (Class of 2025) as part of their senior project in the Department of Performance, Production, and Community.

Mar 9
Sunday
2:00 pm - 4:00 pm
Tickets go on sale January 31

Two harlequins, two shepherds, and death share the stage in Edna St. Vincent Millay’s fanciful one-act. This poetic farce explores the morals of war, friendship, love, and boredom all in the span of 30 minutes! Harlequins Pierrot and Columbine lament their shiny decadence. Cothurnus wears the Masque of Tragedy. Friends Thyrsis and Corydon lose their lives in a make-believe battle. How does a play that was shaped and informed by the 20 million casualties during World War I speak to a world on edge over a century later?

Directed by Eden Fahy (Class of 2025) as part of their senior project in the Department of Performance, Production, and Community.

Mar 23
Sunday
4:00 pm - 5:30 pm
Sundin Music Hall

Program TBD.

Mar 28
Friday
12:45 pm - 2:00 pm
Mitsch Lecture

3M/Ronald A. Mitsch Lecture in Chemistry  

Guest lecturer: Paul S. Weiss, distinguished professor of chemistry, University of California, Los Angeles

Biology functions at the nanoscale. Thus, there are special opportunities not only to make biological measurements using nanotechnology, but also to interact directly in order to influence biological outcomes. Learn how we fabricate and use nanostructures to advance high-throughput gene editing for cellular therapies targeting genetic diseases and cancer immunotherapy. 

 

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