Women's Tennis vs Trinity
- Sponsored by:
- Women's Varsity Tennis Team
Memorial Field House Nelson Recreational Center
Memorial Field House Nelson Recreational Center
Softball Field
Peter Kohn Field
Middlebury College Museum of Art Family Day
Art lovers of all ages are welcome to the museum for a special day of art talks, crafts, and fun in the museum! Families will join art educators in the lobby of the MCMA for hands-on craft projects inspired by artworks in the collection. Inside the museum, guides will lead looking exercises for all ages. Light refreshments will be served, perfect for ages 6+
Mahaney Arts Center Lower Lobby
Come volunteer to cook dinner at the Charter House Coalition, a homeless shelter in town!
Off Campus
For the Christian, Christian-curious, and Christian-conflicted. We’ll share appetizers and mocktails over lightly-guided scripture readings, discussion and prayers. Hosted by Prof. Mary Jane Simpson, msimpson@midd.
Charles P. Scott Center for Spiritual and Religious Life (Hathaway House)
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
Memorial Field House Nelson Recreational Center
Described as spiritual, joyful, powerful, and raucous, Shape Note (or Sacred Harp) singing is a traditional American style of four-part, a capella, community singing popular in the United States before the Civil War. This style still thrives across the US and in the UK, with strongholds in the American South and New England. It is called Shape Note because the notes of the scale are indicated by distinctive shapes and names.
McCullough - Mitchell Green Lounge
Join us for our weekly Sunday meetings!
Robert A. Jones '59 Conference Room