Public Events Calendar

Sunday, November 09, 2025

Monday, November 10, 2025

  • Gold Star Hall Ceremony (Opens in new tab/window)

    Great Hall, Memorial Union
    Lectures Program
    Additional details

    Ceremony: Presentation
    The Gold Star Hall Ceremony is held annually around Veterans Day in November to honor and remember ISU students who died while serving in the US military. The Gold Star Hall committee selects students whose names are engraved in the Gold Star Hall to be honored each year. The ceremony brings light to these service members' personal lives and the life they lived while at Iowa State through a powerful narration of each honoree's biography. Family members, friends, faculty, staff, students and members of the public gather every year to pay their respects and honor the sacrifice made by these students in service to their country.

    2025 Honorees:

    Thomas Smith
    World War II - Navy, Lieutenant Junior Grade
    Hometown: Boone, IA
    Years at ISU: 1937-1942

    Eugene Armstrong
    World War II - Army, 1st Lieutenant
    Hometown: Jefferson, IA
    Years at ISU: 1936-1940

    David Wendell Myers
    Vietnam - Marine Corps, Captain
    Hometown: Ames, IA
    Years at ISU: 1956-1961

    Myron Poock
    Vietnam - Army, Captain
    Hometown: Sumner, IA
    Years at ISU: 1961-1965

    There will be a reception to follow the ceremony. The ceremony will not be recorded.
    Co-Sponsors: Gold Star Hall Committee, Committee on Lectures (funded by Student Government)

  • Gold Star Hall Ceremony (Opens in new tab/window)

    Durham Great Hall
    Gold Star Hall
    Additional details

    The Gold Star Hall Ceremony honors Iowa State service members who have died serving their country. There will be a reception with food and drink to follow.

Tuesday, November 11, 2025

  • Art Walk: Veteran’s Day

    Memorial Union, Gold Star Hall
    University Museums
    Additional details

    This Veteran's Day, join University Museums for a meaningful art walk honoring the service and sacrifice of Iowa State veterans. Explore Christian Petersen's powerful war sculptures in the Memorial Union's Gold Star Hall and the Anderson Sculpture Garden. This guided tour connects art with history and reflects on the legacy of Cyclone veterans.\n\nStart at Memorial Union, Gold Star Hall\n

  • 10th Annual Three-Minute Thesis Final Competition (Opens in new tab/window)

    Sun Room, Memorial Union
    Lectures Program
    Additional details

    Speaker: Iowa State Graduate Students
    The Three Minute Thesis (3MT) celebrates research being conducted by current ISU graduate students. Developed by the University of Queensland, the competition is an opportunity for students to describe their research, in three minutes, in a relatable and relevant way to a non-specialist audience.

    The cosponsors of this event have provided access to a live stream via the Graduate College's Facebook page.
    Co-Sponsors: The Graduate College, Committee on Lectures (funded by Student Government)

  • Piano Studio Recital (Opens in new tab/window)

    Martha-Ellen Tye Recital Hall, Simon Estes Music Hall
    Music and Theater
  • Open Mic Night (Opens in new tab/window)

    Maintenance Shop
    Memorial Union and Student Engagement
    Additional details

    ISU students - are you looking to impress your fellow Cyclones with your amazing talents? Then don't miss Open Mic Night at the M-Shop!

Wednesday, November 12, 2025

  • Indigenous Peoples and the American Constitution (Opens in new tab/window)

    2630 Memorial Union
    Lectures Program
    Additional details

    Speaker: Sebastian Braun
    Part of the America250 lecture series.

    The United States Constitution, its application, and its interpretation have of necessity existed in the context of inherently sovereign American Indian nations.  How the Constitution has been read and enacted in regard to Native peoples has always been a reflection of contemporary American moral guidelines. This lecture will discuss some of the complex relationships that have resulted.

    Sebastian Braun became director of American Indian studies at Iowa State University in 2015; he was previously chair of the department of American Indian studies at the University of North Dakota. His research interests are focused around the intersections of culture, politics, and the environment; ethnohistory (mostly the northern plains); and contemporary issues of sovereignty. His current work deals with the extraction of natural resources and the impacts on communities. Since 2005, he has been writing the chapter on the "United States for The Indigenous World", the yearly summary of developments concerning indigenous peoples by the International Work Group on Indigenous Affairs (IWGIA).

    This lecture recording can be found on the Available Recordings page approximately two business days after the event and will remain accessible for three weeks.
    Co-Sponsors: Center for Cyclone Civics, American Indian Studies Program, Committee on Lectures (funded by Student Government)

  • SUB Comedy Night w/ Ryan Niemiller (Opens in new tab/window)

    Maintenance Shop
    Memorial Union and Student Engagement
    Additional details

    Comedian Ryan Niemiller - a finalist on America's Got Talent - brings the laughs to the M-Shop tonight!

Thursday, November 13, 2025

  • The Work We Do Together: Scholars as Partners Within and Beyond the University (Opens in new tab/window)

    2155 Marston
    Lectures Program
    Additional details

    Speaker: Andrew Klumpp
    Andrew Klumpp, PhD, public historian and editor of "The Annals of Iowa," will present a lecture exploring how scholars can engage meaningfully with public programs beyond the university without reinforcing a binary between academic and community-based work. As the head of public programs, educational initiatives, and community outreach at the State Historical Society of Iowa, Dr. Klumpp oversees efforts that reach more than 23,000 individuals annually—from preschoolers to lifelong learners—through museum tours, teacher trainings, and community festivals.

    This lecture will be especially valuable to students in the arts and humanities who are considering careers in alternative academic paths, nonprofit organizations, museums, or community development. Attendees will gain insight into building community-centered partnerships with arts and humanities organizations across Iowa and the Midwest, and learn strategies for bridging institutional and public spheres in inclusive, collaborative ways.
    Co-Sponsors: Center for Excellence in the Arts and Humanities, Committee on Lectures (funded by Student Government)

  • Fall lecture: Center for Excellence in the Arts and Humanities (Opens in new tab/window)

    2155 Marston Hall
    For Faculty and Staff
    Additional details

    "The Work We Do Together: Scholars as Partners Within and Beyond the University," Andrew Klumpp, public historian at the State Historical Society of Iowa. He will be focusing on bridging the divide between scholars working at universities and public programs happening beyond the university. This talk will be especially impactful for the faculty and students working in or interested in community-engaged research and in extension/outreach opportunities for the Liberal Arts and Design.

  • Closing Reception: Future Forest: Digital Echoes, PhD Exhibition by Amenda Tate (Opens in new tab/window)

    Gallery 181, College of Design 715 Bissell Road, Ames, IA, United States
    College of Design
    Additional details

    Closing reception for "Future Forest: Digital Echoes," an interactive exhibition by interdisciplinary artist Amenda Tate as part of her PhD research in human-computer interaction at Iowa State.

    In this exhibition, she invites you to wander to through a paper-and-light ecosystem that reacts to presence — part ritual, part experiment, part myth. Interwoven stories unfold out of order:

    - The Waxen Grove, where ancestral spirits are preserved in wax and light

    - The Translucent Shrine, where machines resurrect belief

    - The Resonant Core, where your movement becomes memory

    Each visit changes the forest. Each visitor leaves a trace. Will you listen to what the forest remembers? Will it remember you?

    Experience. Interact. Leave a digital echo.

    Follow the myth as it grows: @futureforest.dsm Support for this project has been provided by the Iowa Arts Council, which exists within the Iowa Economic Development Authority.

  • How Pirates Saved the American Revolution (Opens in new tab/window)

    2630 Memorial Union
    Lectures Program
    Additional details

    Speaker: Amanda Knief
    2025 Veteran's Day Lecture
    Part of the America250 lecture series.

    This lecture explores the daring exploits of American privateers and pirates who played a pivotal role in undermining British naval dominance during the Revolutionary War. Attendees will learn how these seafaring rebels disrupted British supply lines, captured enemy vessels, and bolstered the fledgling American economy through prize money and trade. Through gripping stories and historical analysis, the talk highlights how these unofficial naval warriors helped turn the tide of war in favor of independence.

    Amanda Knief is the Lectures Program director and the university parliamentarian. She received her B.S. in Journalism and Communication from Iowa State and her J.D. from Drake University Law School. She worked as legislative counsel for the Iowa Legislature before working in Washington, D.C. as a nonprofit lobbyist, nonprofit legal director, and analyst for the Library of Congress' Congressional Research Service. Knief regularly leads Honors Program seminars about U.S. law and piracy.

    This lecture recording can be found on the Available Recordings page approximately two business days after the event and will remain accessible for three weeks.
    Co-Sponsors: Center for Cyclone Civics, Carrie Chapman Catt Center for Women and Politics, Military-Affiliated Student Center, Committee on Lectures (funded by Student Government)

  • Museum Meetup: 50 Years of Collecting and Preserving the Past

    Brunnier Art Museum, 295 Scheman Building
    University Museums
    Additional details

    Collections are housed everywhere, whether in museum display cases, ornate keepsake and jewelry boxes, and more. In honor of University Museums celebrating 50 years, join us at the Brunnier Art Museum with friends old and new to explore 50 Years of Collecting and Preserving the Past. Decorate your own take-home trinket box, supplies provided and enjoy free snacks.\n

  • Cyclone Cinema: The Naked Gun (Opens in new tab/window)

    Carver 101
    Memorial Union and Student Engagement
    Additional details

    Don't miss this FREE Cyclone Cinema showing of The Naked Gun!

Friday, November 14, 2025

Saturday, November 15, 2025