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Thursday, April 30, 2026

  • A black and white poster advertising weekly meetings for IHH.

    It Happens Here Meeting

    Join us every Thursday at 5:30pm in Chellis House for a community-building meeting of students committed to sexual-violence prevention and supporting survivors. We will also use this time to plan the annual It Happens Here event, taking place on Friday, April 24th.

    It Happens Here (IHH) is an annual anti-sexual violence tradition founded in 2012. The event aims to honor survivors by promoting awareness, solidarity, and healing through the sharing of stories. 

    Chellis Living Room/Seminar Room

  • Graphic with black background with "NER" in white minimalist lettering and "Ulysses Reading Series" underneath in a thicker, orange typeface. In the bottom right corner of the graphic, there is red, stylized line work that resembles a right angle.

    NER Ulysses Reading Series

    Sponsored by:
    NEW ENGLAND REVIEW

    Join us on Thursday, April 30 at 7:00 PM for the fourth installment of the NER Ulysses Reading Series! This biannual, in-person reading series is hosted in Middlebury College’s vibrant and accessible Humanities House (115 Franklin Street), and celebrates new work by writers at all stages of their careers.

    115 Franklin Street main floor, Humanities Center

    Open to the Public
  • Queer Sex Ed: Defining Your True Desires

    Join us for a fun and informative workshop about queer sex with sex educator and owner of Earth and Salt, a pleasure-centered adult store in Burlington, Vermont, Beth Hankes. We’ll talk about what defines queer sex, common practices, and check out toys that can be used to enhance and expand your explorations! Free goodie bags and raffle prizes will also be available to participants. 

    The Prism Center

  • Full moon and overlapping silhouette of white tree branches before a dark blue background.

    Our Town

    Sponsored by:
    Theatre

    Described by Edward Albee as “the greatest American play ever written,” Thornton Wilder’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play Our Town presents the small town of Grover’s Corners from 1901 – 1913. It’s three acts are, “Daily Life,” “Love and Marriage” and “Death and Eternity.” Narrated by a stage manager and performed with minimal props and sets, the play depicts the simple daily lives of the Webb and Gibbs families as their children fall in love, marry, and eventually – in one of the most famous scenes in American theatre – die.

    Wright Theatre

    $15/10/8/5
    Open to the Public

Friday, May 1, 2026

  • The image features the Third Princess, one of the female characters in the tale, with her pet cat. The original cat has been replaced by Hello Kitty.

    Living with Genji: The "World's First Novel" in 21st Century Japan

    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

    Open to the Public
  • NESCAC Women's Tennis Quarter Finals

    No.8 Colby vs. No.1 Wesleyan @9.00am

    No.7 Hamilton vs. No.2 Bowdoin @1.00pm

    No.6 Williams vs. No.3 Middlebury @1.00pm

    No.5 Tufts vs. No.4 Amherst @9.00am

    Memorial Field House Nelson Recreational Center

    Open to the Public
  • Kellogg Competition in Latin Translation

    The Kellogg Prize fund was established in May 1918 by Prof. Brainerd Kellogg, Class of 1858, “to encourage Latin and English.”This award is given for the best sight translation from Latin poetry into English.Contestants may use a dictionary.THIS CONTEST IS OPEN TO ALL MIDDLEBURY COLLEGE STUDENTS.

    If you have a conflict with the scheduled time, please contact Prof. Star in the Classics Department by Wednesday, April 29th.

    Twilight 206