ND Glee Club Commencement Concert
Saturday, May 17, 2025 9:00–10:30 PM
- Location
- DescriptionThe Glee Club presents its annual Commencement Concert in DeBartolo Performing Arts Center, with the musical selections chosen by this year's graduating seniors. The program will include classical choral music for men's voices, folk songs, spirituals, and songs of Notre Dame.
GET TICKETS - Websitehttps://events.nd.edu/events/2025/05/17/nd-glee-club-commencement-concert-1/
More from Upcoming Events (Next 7 Days)
- May 209:30 AMExhibit—"Tragedies of War: Images of WWII in Print Visual Culture"This exhibit commemorates the 80th anniversary of the end of the Second World War (1939-45) using primarily European visual sources recently acquired by Rare Books & Special Collections. It showcases more than 40 works on paper, including posters, maps, propaganda ephemera, and illustrated books, as well as photographs and first-hand accounts. The exhibit explores themes of Nazi racial ideology, the Holocaust, children in war, resistance, liberation, and memories of war. By examining images created for personal use and for state-sponsored propaganda, the exhibit presents a visual narrative of the war’s profound impact on individuals and societies, offering deeper insight into how this war was experienced and remembered. This exhibit is curated by Natasha Lyandres, Curator, Rare Books & Special Collections; Jean McManus, Catholic Studies Librarian, University Archives; and Julia Schneider, German Language and Literature and Italian Studies Librarian, Hesburgh Libraries. This and other exhibits within the Hesburgh Libraries are generously supported by the McBrien Special Collections Endowment. All exhibits are free and open to the public during business hours. Related Events Monday, March 31, 4:30 pmLecture: Martina Cucchiara, “Fervent Faith, Relentless Persecution: The Daily Life of Erna Becker-Kohen, a Catholic of Jewish Descent in Nazi Germany” Thursday, April 10, 4:30 pmLecture: Robert M. Citino, "The Fascist Lair: the Battle of Berlin" Tuesday, April 22, 4:30 pmYom HaShoah Program to commemorate the victims of the Holocaust Exhibit Tours Meet and speak with curators of the spring exhibit, "Tragedies of War: Images of WWII in Print Visual Culture." Monday, March 31, 3:30 pmThursday, April 10, 3:30 pmTuesday, April 22, 3:30 pm
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- May 234:30 PMKeynote Address — "Dark Maritain: The Postliberal Alternative to Integralism"Religion & Democracy ConferenceKEYNOTE ADDRESS "Dark Maritain: The Postliberal Alternative to Integralism" Speaker: Kevin Vallier, Professor of Philosophy, University of Toledo Abstract: Catholics and Christians increasingly explore anti-liberal politics. Yet many anti-liberal theories offer more rhetoric than substance. This paper examines Catholic postliberalism, seeking a more coherent version than currently offered. I propose to find an attractive postliberal Catholic politics in an unlikely place—the thought of Jacques Maritain. I develop Dark Maritainianism, which combines Maritain's principles of church–state relations with a clear-eyed assessment of how sin distorts moral knowledge in public life. Catholic integralism—a position that subordinates the state to Church authority based on the primacy of the spiritual—contrasts with Dark Maritainianism. My approach denies this subordination is necessary. Rather than pursuing distant ideals, Dark Maritainianism emphasizes incremental improvements through reforms guided by Catholic principles. For instance, in education policy, it would advocate reforms that allow public funding for diverse faith-based institutions while maintaining academic standards—honoring religious freedom and parental primacy while acknowledging the state's legitimate interest in forming capable citizens. Such reforms remain sensitive to social complexity and to the corrupting effects of sin on moral knowledge. Dark Maritainianism offers a more theoretically coherent and practically viable path forward for Catholic political engagement. It satisfies those exploring alternatives to liberalism through more theoretically satisfying and politically concrete solutions. Originally published at philreligion.nd.edu.
- May 241:00 PMThe Metropolitan Opera Live in HD: "Salome" (Strauss)Music Director Yannick Nézet-Séguin conducts his first Met performances of Strauss's white-hot one-act tragedy, which receives its first new production at the company in 20 years. Claus Guth, one of Europe's leading opera directors, gives the biblical story — already filtered through the beautiful and strange imagination of Oscar Wilde's play — a psychologically perceptive, Victorian-era setting rich in symbolism and subtle shades of darkness and light. Headlining the new staging is soprano Elza van den Heever as the abused and unhinged antiheroine, who demands the head of Jochanaan, sung by celebrated baritone Peter Mattei. Tenor Gerhard Siegel is Salome's lecherous stepfather, King Herod, with mezzo-soprano Michelle DeYoung as his wife, Herodias, and tenor Piotr Buszewski as Narraboth. GET TICKETS