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Sunday, February 12, 2023

  • MiddSPEAK Weekly Meeting

    A 1 hour planning, brainstorming, or educational meeting for the student organization, MiddSPEAK, whose focus is to help raise awareness for students who struggle with eating disorders/disordered eating.

    Ross Seminar Room 011

  • Middlebury Student Quakers –– Weekly Meeting

    Middlebury Student Quakers weekly meeting. Please come to talk, connect, and worship (meditate). People of all religious and non-religious backgrounds are welcome!

    Charles P. Scott Center for Spiritual and Religious Life - 46 South Street

  • Prajna Meditation Club

    Close your week off with a warm, calm feeling and a cup of chai in your hand, as we meditate and share gratitude at Scott Center at 46 South Street. No experience required, the more the merrier! Instantly best friends if you bring your own cup.

    Charles P. Scott Center for Spiritual and Religious Life - 46 South Street

  • Green circle with a smaller circle of the world inside in green and white.  Outside the green circle are photos of enviornmental events

    Weekly Sunday Night Environmental Group Meeting

    Sunday Night Environmental Group (SNEG) is a non-hierarchical student org committed to climate and social justice activism. In the past we have pushed the college to divest from fossil fuels, passed anti-fossil fuel infrastructure resolutions in town, trained students on methods of non-violent direct action, occupied the statehouse, organized climate strikes, and so much more. We strive to ground our work in anti-racism, indigenous sovereignty, and community power.  All are welcome regardless of prior knowledge or experience.

    Franklin Environmental Center, The Orchard-Hillcrest 103

Monday, February 13, 2023

Tuesday, February 14, 2023

  • Learn about Farm & Wilderness Foundation

    Looking for a summer job with a purpose? Come meet staff from Farm & Wilderness, a unique outdoor summer camp in Vermont that emphasizes joyful play, purposeful work, and rugged outdoor living.

    Davis Family Library Vestibule (main entrance)

    Closed to the Public
  • Weekly Politics Luncheon

    Students and the public are invited to attend this weekly nonpartisan discussion of recent political events, hosted by Professor Matthew Dickinson. Held on most Tuesdays from 12:30-1:20 pm EST. Check the calendar for dates. No expertise assumed. All viewpoints welcome.

    This is both an in-person and a virtual event. To register to attend via Zoom, please contact Prof. Dickinson.

    Robert A. Jones '59 Conference Room

    Open to the Public
  • Bobolinks Auditions

    All are welcome to audition for Middlebury’s oldest gender-inclusive acappella group “The Bobolinks!”  No prior acappella experience is necessary! Please prepare a verse & a chorus of any song to show off your beautiful voice. We will also go through a few warm-up exercises. Sign up using the go link “Go/Sing4Bobos”!

    Forest East Lounge, Room 152

  • Middlebury Mamajamas Auditions

    Come audition for the Mamajamas! We are a Co-ed student-run acapella group open to anyone of all experience levels and voice parts with singing! Join us in Atwater B Library next to Atwater Dining Hall and prepare a verse and chorus from a song of your choice! Hope to see you there! 

    Atwater B Library, Section A, Room 100

  • Stuck in the Middle (SIM) Auditions

    Auditions for the all-male acappella group Stuck in the Middle (SIM). Sign up at go/sim (or just show up at any time between 4 and 8:30) and come prepared to sing exercises and a verse + chorus from a song of your choosing.

    Chateau Grand Salon

  • Earthquake Disaster in Turkey and Syria: A Discussion with Faculty

    Abstract: Two big earthquakes hit Turkey and Syria on February 6. Thousands of buildings collapsed, and hundreds of thousands became trapped under the rubble. So far more than 21,000 lost their lives, and many more are injured. The death toll is estimated to reach 200,000 as more bodies are recovered. Entire cities and villages have been destroyed. With more than 10 million people left homeless, some doubly by war and now natural disaster, the earthquake stands as one of the biggest humanitarian crises of this century.

    Franklin Environmental Center, The Orchard-Hillcrest 103