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How Did You Get Here, Sam Koplinka-Loehr ’13?

Categories: Midd Blogosphere


“How Did You Get Here?” is an annual series produced by the Middlebury Fellows in Narrative Journalism.

How Did You Get Here, Aidesha-Kiya Vega-Hutchens ’13.5?

Categories: Midd Blogosphere


“How Did You Get Here?” is an annual series produced by the Middlebury Fellows in Narrative Journalism.

How Did You Get Here, Benjamin Miller ’14.5?

Categories: Midd Blogosphere


“How Did You Get Here?” is an annual series produced by the Middlebury Fellows in Narrative Journalism.

Brainpower in Action: 2013 Spring Student Symposium

Categories: Midd Blogosphere

Last week ended on an impressive note, with more than 350 students sharing elements of their intensive and individual research at the seventh annual Spring Student Symposium. Like show-and-tell on steroids, the intellectually charged event showcases a year’s worth of work by students, including plenty of first-years and sophomores in addition to juniors and seniors. And their presentations showed immense maturity as well as facility of the topics at hand.

As things kicked off on Thursday evening at the Mahaney Center for the Arts, students, faculty, and staff enjoyed musical presentations, dance and theater performances, and a keynote address with actor and activist Cassidy Freeman ’05 (listen below).

On Friday, the Great Hall and adjacent classrooms of Bicentennial Hall were packed with the day’s full schedule of poster sessions and oral presentations, capped off with an evening reception and more music and theater performances.

Below is a slideshow that briefly captures the excitement of the event, followed by an audio clip of Freeman’s keynote address in its entirety.

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The 2013 Student Symposium kicked off the weekend in the Mahaney Center for the Arts Concert Hall with welcoming performances by a cappella groups the Mountain Ayres and the Mamajamas (pictured above).

Hear what actress and activist Cassidy Freeman ’05 had to say about Middlebury, creativity, and writing your personal mission statement:

Nordic Coach Andrew Gardner talks NCAAs

Categories: Midd Blogosphere

What Humankind Left Behind

Categories: Midd Blogosphere

By focusing on a subject he calls the architecture of residual landscape, internationally prominent photographer Edward Burtynsky creates an art form that is as engaging as it is provocative.

The selection of photographs, on view at the Museum of Art through April 21, grew from a concept the artist began exploring in the granite quarries throughout Vermont and Canada in the early 1990s. Director of the Arts Pieter Broucke and Juliette Bianco, assistant director of Dartmouth’s Hood Museum of Art, where the exhibition originated, are co-curators and introduced the show at its opening this week.

The works are large-scale—as are, after all, the deeply cavernous subjects—but the largeness of it all can be deceiving. The artist gives little sense of perspective within the photographs, so the smallest details—the rock striations and geometric cuts, a bright green pool, a chalky white glaze—became almost otherworldly, while at the same time so clearly recognizable as our own earth. It’s a mesmerizing beauty born of industrial destruction. The exhibition also inherently serves as social commentary, but the artist himself is not documentarian; he doesn’t press his opinion but rather propose the opportunity for healthy and ongoing dialogue.

Click through a slideshow of selections below, then make a trip to the Museum to see the show in person—a must!

Danby Marble Quarry #2

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Edward Burtynsky (Canadian, born 1955), Underground Quarry, Danby, Vermont, 1995, digital chromogenic color print. Courtesy of the artist.

When Alumni Come Back to Teach

Categories: Midd Blogosphere

AckStudTeachWinter term has always been a favorite part of the academic year at Middlebury for students, present and past. Many alumni look back fondly on the classes they took in January and the professors who taught them. Some are even fortunate enough to make a trip back to campus during J-term—this time as teachers themselves.

Middmag talked to six alumni who were back sharing their knowledge and expertise with students this past January.