Events
Thursday, October 23, 2025
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Middlebury Club Sailing Practice
Daily practice at the Hopper Family Sailing Pavilion on Lake Champlain
Off Campus
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Make a Worry Stone
Be in community and make a worry stone out of Sculpey to take with you.
Charles P. Scott Center for Spiritual and Religious Life (Hathaway House)
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Stitch & Bitch X DDMC Paper Marigold Workshop
This week’s Stitch & Bitch is in collaboration with DDMC! Come learn how to make paper marigolds!
Chellis House Library
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Weekly Feminist Stitch & Bitch
Join Chellis House for our weekly Stitch & Bitch! Gather in feminist community to scheme, make art, meet new people, use your hands, and take a break from screens and school. All materials will be provided, but feel free to bring any projects you’re currently working on. Together we can build a better world, but first we must imagine it!
Chellis House Library
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Antonia Kuo Artist Talk
Join the artist Antonia Kuo for a presentation on her practice. Kuo’s work centers around recording, image-making, and the potential of the photographic medium. In her unique “photochemical paintings” she utilizes light-sensitive paper and photochemistry to capture light, time and mark making, collapsing her drawing and painting practice with photographic materiality. Like her photochemical works, Kuo’s sculptures serve as recordings of forms that are lost, obscured, and only partially remembered. FREE
Johnson Classroom 204
Open to the Public
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Extracting the Past: How the 'AI' Industry Exploits Art History & What We Can Do to Stop It
Over the last several years, universities and museums have partnered with commercial technology firms like Google, Microsoft, and Meta, who have promised that their AI products will enhance both historical research and accessibility to historical collections. These promises, however, are not supported by the reality of what computer vision—the branch of AI most relevant to the history of art—can achieve. So why have major institutions in education and the arts been so quick to take up these firms’ offers?
Mahaney Arts Center 125
Open to the Public
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Middlebury Club Nordic Weekly Practice
Regularly scheduled practice meeting outside of the Athletic Center Lobby. Will be running or rollerskiing!
Peterson Family Athletic Complex
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Middlebury Debate Society Meeting
During the meeting team members will practice their rhetorical and debating skills by participating in practice debates, lectures, and drills on both specific speech technique as well as lectures on topics related to debate eg. economics, international relations, philosophy, ethics, sociology, etc.
Munroe 311
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Middlebury in Beijing Pre-Departure Orientation
This will be a mandatory pre-departure orientation for students planning to study in Beijing during the spring (or winter-spring) of 2026. (Students admitted to the program will receive a Zoom invitation via email.)
Virtual Middlebury
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Restorative Justice and Lived Religion: Transforming Mass Incarceration in Chicago
This lecture by Jason Springs (Professor of Religion, Ethics, and Peace Studies at the University of Notre Dame) introduces a novel understanding of what restorative justice is and how it should be implemented. It explores the ways in which restorative justice ethics and practices exhibit moral and spiritual dynamics, and what difference such “lived religious” dynamics can make in transforming structural violence.
Franklin Environmental Center, The Orchard-Hillcrest 103
Open to the Public
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The quest for, and impossibility of, immortality. Dr Vincent Lynch, University of Buffalo
Biology Seminar, Saul Lecture: Dr. Vincent Lynch, University of Buffalo
The quest for, and impossibility of, immortality.
A public lecture, sponsored by George B Saul II lecture fund and the Biology Department.
Why do we get sick, old, and die?
Theoretically there is no reason organisms cannot live forever. However, except for maybe one animal, every thing that has ever lived, and will live, will get old, sick, and die. But if immortality is possible, why hasn’t it evolved?
McCardell Bicentennial Hall 220
Open to the Public
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Womxn's Ultimate Frisbee Practice
Come throw frisbees, have fun, learn new skills, and meet new people!
Lighted Practice Field
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Privilege & Poverty Academic Cluster Summer Internships information session with alumni
Interested in exploring the dynamics of economic inequality through community work next summer? Looking for a deeply engaging and meaningful paid summer experience? Join recent P&P interns and alums to learn about the Privilege & Poverty Academic Cluster summer internships, both local and national. Come with curiosity, questions and a hunger for great conversation and food!
26 Blinn Lane, CCE
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