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Thursday, April 17, 2025

  • Women in Finance Symposium

    Join us for an inspiring symposium celebrating women in finance! Hear from professionals, gain valuable insights into careers in the financial industry, and connect with a community of ambitious, driven women. Whether you’re just starting out or exploring new paths, this event is all about empowerment, opportunity, and breaking barriers in finance.

    Axinn Center 220

  • Environmental Studies Program Spring Social

    Environmental Studies Program Spring Social

    Come meet fellow ES majors, minors, and faculty. Learn more about the major and opportunities in the program and get any questions answered prior to fall registration. Prospective majors and minors are also encouraged to attend.

    A variety of snacks and treats will be provided.

    Franklin Environmental Center, The Orchard-Hillcrest 103

    Closed to the Public
  • Fantasizing Christian America: A Queer Take on Christian Nationalism

    Daniel Miller (Professor of Humanities at Landmark College) will deliver the third talk in the 2025 Scott Lecture Series. Christian nationalists insist that the US was founded by and for Christians. As a resurgent populist movement in contemporary American politics, Christian nationalism aims to establish the legal, moral, and cultural dominance of an ultra-conservative, exclusivist interpretation of the religion, and it views diversity and pluralism as existential threats to that objective.

    Robert A. Jones '59 Conference Room

    Open to the Public
  • Photographic portraits of the writers with the text: Writers on writing: a conversation with Dan O'Brien and J. M. Tyree.

    Writers on Writing: A Conversation with Dan O'Brien ‘96 and J. M. Tyree ‘95

    Middlebury alums Dan O’Brien and J. M. Tyree return to the College having earned acclaim in creative writing since they began sharing their work with one another over thirty years ago as undergraduates. They are currently press-mates: Tyree has recently published his novella, The Haunted Screen with Deep Vellum, and O’Brien has published a memoir, From Scarsdale: A Childhood, and a collection of his plays, True Story: A Trilogy, with Dalkey Archive Press, an imprint of Deep Vellum.

    Axinn Center Abernethy Room (221)

    Open to the Public
  • Hot Yoga with Danny

    This class is an hour hot yoga class designed to build strength, balance, and flexibility.

    Forest West Basement Activity Space (031)

  • Catholic Club Thursday Faith Night

    Come and gather with fellow Catholic and non-Catholic students to talk about the faith and experience Christian fellowship. Activities range from board games, bible study, prayer, worship, and social activities off-campus, such as line dancing! All are welcome and we look forward to spending this precious time together. 

    McCullough - Mitchell Green Lounge

  • This minimalist graphic features a black background with white and yellow text. The text reads NER Ulysses Reading Series.

    NER's Ulysses Reading Series - National Poetry Month Edition

    Join us for the second installment of New England Review’s Ulysses Reading Series! On Thursday, April 17th, at 7:00 PM, we’ll host acclaimed poets Noah Warren, Rage Hezekiah, Trish Dougherty, and one Middlebury student writer in celebration of National Poetry Month. 

    Hosted in Middlebury College’s vibrant and accessible Humanities House (115 Franklin Street).

    Light fare & specialty mocktails will be served. Free & open to the public.

    115 Franklin Street ground floor

    Open to the Public
  • Middmyco Meetings

    Regular club meetings where members will discuss mycology and mushrooms.

    McCardell Bicentennial Hall 311

  • Hadestown: A Song Cycle Sung Again

    What happens when you make music together, not in pursuit of perfection, but in pursuit of connection? Since February 2025, a group of musicians and fellow artists have been putting that question into practice, finding conversation and community through the creative process. Through the music of Anaïs Mitchell (’04), we find hope through tragedy and meaning behind why we perform to begin with. This selected song cycle is not just a concert, but an ongoing gift to give: to make us all “see how the world could be, in spite of the way that it is.” 

    Mahaney Arts Center Lower Lobby

    Free; no tickets required
    Open to the Public