Inside the Costume Shop
Take a behind-the-scenes look at some of the work that helps bring stage characters to life in Middlebury’s Theatre Department.
Take a behind-the-scenes look at some of the work that helps bring stage characters to life in Middlebury’s Theatre Department.
Members of the MiddMyco Club explored a stretch of the Trail Around Middlebury, bagging samples for a statewide fungi database.
Professor of Film and Media Culture Jason Mittell spoke on an expert panel for NPR’s 1A.
The Monkey Mind Lab, a podcast hosted by Abhir Suri ’28, is one of several creative ways the Middlebury sophomore tries to make complex topics more accessible.
Fifty-five students from 48 institutions were selected for the award in recognition of outstanding leadership, public service, and academic achievement.
The College celebrated the newest members with a dinner and presentations on April 25.
In an essay for The Conversation, Shalom Goldman, the Pardon Tillinghast Professor Emeritus of Religion, says that some conservative Christians are interpreting the conflict through Biblical prophesies.
Dozens of alumni who helped launch Middlebury’s Sunday Night Environmental Group (originally known as the “Sunday Night Group”) returned to campus recently for SNEG’s 20-year reunion and a two-day conference exploring the question, “What Works Now?”
We asked a few of them to reflect on their time as Middlebury students and to offer some advice for today’s generation of college climate activists. Here are a few of the voices from that gathering.
“Find your niche,” says the director of the Middlebury Climate Action Program.
“Come forward with bold ideas,” says the executive director of Fossil Free Media.
“This is such a great time to start something new,” says the chief partnership and strategy advisor for Climate United.
“I rely on the skills I learned here every day,” says the political organizer.
The Middlebury senior talks about his efforts to overcome anxiety and panic attacks on his way to feeling more confident on the squash courts.
115 Franklin Street main floor, Humanities Center
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.
Featuring a curated mix of New England Review contributors, local authors, and promising Middlebury student writers, the NER Ulysses Reading Series produces a lively and thought-provoking experience that demonstrates the breadth and complexity of our literary moment.Featuring poet and educator Stephen Cramer, writer and Bread Loaf coordinator Jason Lamb, NER contributor Meg Reynolds, and Middlebury student writer Joanne Zhang.
Old Stone Mill (82 Weybridge Street)
The Spring Art Market at the Old Stone Mill is an artisans and craft market run by student vendors who have created products to sell in a variety of mediums, such as ceramics, jewelry, crochet, greeting cards, prints, and crepes! Bring clean, unwanted clothes to participate in a clothing swap. The Old Stone Mill will also be open for viewing M Gallery’s spring ‘26 exhibition, “Tools for the Future.” Individuals can purchase student work using Venmo or cash. Featuring live music from student band, Two Shakes of a Lamb’s Tail. Rain location: Axinn.
Mahaney Arts Center Dance Theatre
Join us for the Middlebury Dance Department’s Spring Dance Concert, an evening of original choreography, music, and improvisation. The concert features students from Daniel Miramontes’ Choreography and Performance, Lida Winfield’s Advanced Improvisation, and McLean Macionis’ Advanced Electronic Music courses. The performance will also feature live music by Ron Rost and Deborah Felmeth along with original lighting design. $15/10/5. Open to the public.
Chateau 005 (Performance Space) 139 Chateau Road
Swiss author Friedrich Dürrenmatt’s The Physicists is a darkly comic thriller set in a psychiatric clinic, where three scientists pretend to be mad. Their hidden identities and inventions trigger a tense battle between ethics and power, revealing how dangerous knowledge can be in the wrong hands.