St. Patrick's Bake Sale Fundraiser for Open Door Clinic
- Sponsored by:
- GlobeMed
All proceeds go to Open Door Clinic!
Davis Family Library Vestibule (main entrance)
All proceeds go to Open Door Clinic!
Davis Family Library Vestibule (main entrance)
This interactive public art installation invites members of the Middlebury community to reflect on what matters most. By sharing personal hopes and aspirations on a communal wall, the project fosters connection, introspection, and a celebration of our shared humanity. Inspired by the global Before I Die project, this installation transforms public space into a canvas for gratitude, memory, and possibility.
Mahaney Arts Center Lower Lobby
Davis Family Library, Upper Level Display Cases
The students in JAPN 290 (“Reading the Tale of Genji” in English”) and Prof. Otilia Milutin (Japanese Studies) are cordially inviting you and your students to view their exhibit, “Living with Genji: The World’s First Novel in 21st Century Japan.” The exhibit features a selection of objects, artwork, movies, and manga inspired by the 11th century classic The Tale of Genji by Murasaki Shikibu. Our exhibit aims to showcase a few selected items that speak both of the tale’s enduring legacy in traditional Japanese arts, and, equally important, of its contemporary reiterations, be they manga and movies adaptations or commercial, consumer-oriented products such as mascots, stationary, fabrics, and other everyday objects. Through our exhibit, we hope to demonstrate how a millennium old classic lives and thrives today in contemporary Japan.
Middlebury College
Join us for 15 minutes of silent meditation every weekday morning, led by various staff, faculty, and students. No registration required. Drop in any day that works for you!
McCullough Crest Room
Come join us in engaging with intercultural dialogues in the AFC community around a range of topics centered around a text each week.
Carr Hall 005
Wrap up a very long winter with warm drinks, bright conversation, and a celebration of all things Anthropology at our spring AnthroCafe. Bring your ideas, questions, and news to share. Anthro-curious friends are always welcome!
-The Anthropology Department
Davis Family Library 105A
Join a competitive, fun group of people for a 1-hour crossfit workout that combines gymnastics, weightlifting, and cardio to perform functional movements!
Memorial Field House Nelson Multi-Use Area
Restorative Yoga with guest instructor, Melissa Mae Bartley. This is an opportunity to ground, heal and restore your mind and body through a gentle yoga practice.
Virtue Field House Goldsmith Lounge
“Making Noise” A deep practice of listening informed by Graham Shelor’s ‘23 research for his most recent dance project - NOISE REDUCTION. In this session, participants are guided through somatic listening practices designed to tune their internal awareness of the moving body. We will expand our gaze outward, engaging in group improvisational scores that challenge our understanding of what it means to be in community. Together, we will investigate: How can we communicate through our bodies? How do we make space to speak and share space to listen?
Mahaney Arts Center Dance Theatre
McCardell Bicentennial Hall 104
This lecture turns to the Ottoman province of Tunis, a terminus for trans-Saharan human trafficking in the late 18th and early 19th century, to center the lives of enslaved women forcibly conveyed to the province. It examines how the violence of slavery intersected with French economic intervention in the region as well as with emerging racial ideologies held by Tunisian and western African elites. This lecture critiques disembodied historical perspectives conventionally preserved in state archives, like those of the chief doctor to the Ottoman governor of Tunis.
Franklin Environmental Center, The Orchard-Hillcrest 103
Come slow down with beads, collaging, watercolors, grown-up coloring books and more. Homemade hot chai and cookies too!