Category Archives: Midd News & Events

Chorus Thanksgiving Concert includes tribute to Midd alumna and staff member Grace & Steve Weber

Songs of Rejoicing and Remembrance:
Middlebury Community Chorus Thanksgiving Concerts

The Middlebury College Community Chorus presents its annual Thanksgiving performances on the Middlebury College campus at the Mahaney Arts Center’s Robison Concert Hall at 7:00pm on Saturday evening, November 23 and again at 3:00 pm on Sunday afternoon, November 24. Historic and contemporary music fills the free, hour-long program entitled “Songs of Rejoicing and Remembrance.” Jeff Rehbach conducts and Tim Guiles accompanies the 110 community and student, faculty, staff, and alumni members of the choir—among the largest choirs in the state!

The choir will share songs of hope, gratitude, peace, and tribute, including the world premiere of Wings of the Morning by Middlebury College professor Peter Hamlin ’73. He wrote this setting of hymn and psalm texts in memory of long-time chorus member Grace Weber ’79, who passed away in December 2016, and her husband Steve, retired College forester, who passed away in May of this year. The chorus will also offer a movement from Emergent Universe Oratorio by Middlebury alumnus Sam Guarnaccia ’67 in a stirring musical setting of words by William Blake: “To see a world in a grain of sand and a heaven in a wild flower, Hold infinity in the palm of your hand and eternity in an hour.”

College Community Chorus on stage“This is the sound of one voice, one spirit, one people: voices singing together in harmony, all of us singing with love…” These words by North American composer Ruth Moody, who sings with the Canadian folk-roots trio The Wailin’ Jennys, will ring out as the concert opens. In the spirit of Thanksgiving, the Chorus will also present dynamic settings of historic psalm texts that give voice to gratefulness, celebration, and praise. They include Sing Out Your Joy by African-American gospel songwriter Victor C. Johnson; a song of praise entitled Modimo, arranged by South African composer-conductor Michael Barrett; and Ngokujabula! scored for chorus and percussion by contemporary composer Dan Forrest that energetically expresses jubilation with sweeping melodies and driving rhythms.

Iowa composer Elaine Hagenberg’s The Music of Stillness exquisitely sets poetry by Sara Teasdale that opens with “There will be rest and pure stars shining.” Minnesota composer Stephen Paulus wrote Hymn to the Eternal Flame in remembrance of all who suffered and perished in the horrors of the Holocaust; it begins, “Every face is in you, every voice, every sorrow, every memory, woven into fire.” From the classical music tradition, Johannes Brahms composed an elegy with lush harmonies and expressive melodies entitled Nänie. With references to ancient Greek and Roman mythology, its text by nineteenth-century German author Friedrich Schiller poignantly depicts the death of that which is beautiful.

The program closes with  Luminous Night of the Soul, an uplifting work by award-winning Norwegian-American composer Ola Gjeilo, who combines texts by the sixteenth-century Spanish poet and mystic St. John of the Cross and contemporary poet Charles Anthony Silvestri with its uplifting sentiment, “Praise to all music which soars to inspire!”

 Instrumentalists — including College teachers, staff, and students — from the Champlain Philharmonic, Vermont Symphony, Burlington Civic Symphony, Middlebury Community Music Center, Middlebury Wind Ensemble, and Middlebury College Orchestra augment the program as they perform several works with the chorus.

Contact director Jeff Rehbach, 989-7355, or on the web at go.middlebury.edu/communitychorus for additional information.

Middlebury Institute professor of Nonproliferation offers lecture at Middlebury College

Middlebury Institute professor lectures on U.S. strategy and Syrian chemical weapons

As Syria descended into civil war in 2011-2012, what had once seemed unimaginable – that the regime might use that country’s chemical weapons (CW) against its own people – became a horrifying reality. Syria’s possession and eventual use of CW confronted the international community with a difficult challenge. The United States, sometimes working with France and the United Kingdom, responded by employing a strategy of coercion. U.S. coercive threats aimed both to deter chemical attacks and to compel the Syrian government to give up its chemical arsenal. This approach, initiated under President Obama, continued under President Trump, eventually led to two rounds of air strikes against Syria. This talk will assess the effectiveness (or lack of effectiveness) of these efforts and attempt to determine the lessons that should be learned for future policies that seek to deal with so-called weapons of mass destruction.

Jeff Knopf is a professor at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey, where he serves as chair of the M.A. program in Nonproliferation and Terrorism Studies. He is also a research affiliate with the Institute’s Center for Nonproliferation Studies (CNS) and with the Center for International Security and Cooperation (CISAC) at Stanford University.

Stargazing at Mittelman Observatory – Autumn 2019

Mittelman Observatory and Middlebury Physics will again host stargazing open house nights this autumn. These Observatory events are scheduled for Friday evenings, September 13 and September 20, from 8:30 PM until 10:00 PM, weather permitting.

Jupiter and Saturn will be in the evening sky on these dates. A variety of interesting stars, star clusters, and nebulae will also be visible through the Observatory’s telescopes. The Observatory includes a 24-inch telescope in a dome and smaller telescopes on the roof.
Observatory open house nights are free and open to the public. However, these events will take place only if the sky is expected to be mostly clear. Please check the Observatory web site at go/observatory or call the Observatory at 443-2266 after 6:30 PM on the evening of the event for weather status.

Additional shorter-notice weather-optimized events may also be scheduled aperiodically and announced through our Observatory-News e-mail list, to which one can subscribe at go/observatory-news.

Come join the Chorus!

Come join the Middlebury College Community Chorus as we begin our fall season — open to all who love to sing! Join students, faculty, staff, alumni, and community members in our choir that numbers nearly 100 members from the greater Lake Champlain region.
We rehearse 7-8:30pm on Sundays and Tuesdays. We begin our rehearsals in Mahaney Arts Center 221 on Sept. 3 and Sept. 8 and then move to our usual location in Mead Chapel on Sept. 10.
Community Chorus in rehearsalThis fall, as we prepare for our concerts the weekend before Thanksgiving, we’ll introduce jubilant pieces influenced by American folk-roots, gospel, and African vocal and drumming traditions, alongside serene settings of remembrance and hope by contemporary composers; also the beautiful elegy entitled “Nänie” by classical composer Johannes Brahms; and inspirational works by Middlebury composers Peter Hamlin (written in memory of Grace and Steve Weber) and Sam Guarnaccia.
We welcome all – without audition – who love to sing (high school, college, and adults), trusting you can carry a tune accurately, are willing to learn to follow a musical score should you not already have that experience, and attend at least one rehearsal each week. Info: conductor Jeff Rehbach, rehbach@middlebury.edu or 989-7355 and on the web at http://go.middlebury.edu/communitychorus

Tickets for the 2019-2020 Arts Season on Sale Starting Sept 9

Box Office Opening Day for Middlebury College ID card holders: Monday, September 9 at 8:30 AM
at the Mahaney Arts Center and McCullough Box Offices

Tickets for the 2019–2020 Performing Arts Series and other selected events go on sale today for Middlebury College students, faculty, staff, and other ID card holders, as well as members of the Performing Arts Series Society (PASS). This year is the Performing Arts Series’ 100th Anniversary, with plenty of exciting concerts, dance events, theatre, and more. We hope to see YOU in the audience!

Go to the online box office>>

Browse the season>>

Watch faculty, students, artists, and staff share what the Performing Arts Series means to them>>

Learn more about PASS>> 

Host an International Student

The Friends
of International Students (FIS) host program recruiting and matching process
for the recently admitted Class of 2023 continues! The Class of 2023 will
include more than 75 international students, including some U.S. students who
have lived abroad and international exchange students. Please contact us if you
are interested in hosting in the fall and spread the word in our community.

International Student
& Scholar Services will hold a series of information meetings about the
program throughout the summer on the 2nd floor of the Service
Building. We ask that new hosts attend a meeting so that we can meet them and
share more information about the program. If you are an experienced host, you
are welcome to join us as your stories and
insights are vital to friends who are new to FIS and trying to decide if they
would be a good fit for the program.

Join us for one
of our host information meetings of the season:

  • Friday, July 12: 12:15-1:15 pm
  • Monday July 22: 5:30-6:30 pm
  • Wednesday, July 24: 5:30-6:30 pm
  • Tuesday, August 6:  12:15-1:15 pm
  • Friday, August 16: 12:15-1:15 pm
  • Monday, August 19: 12:15-1:15 AND
    5:30-6:30 pm
  • Thursday, Sept. 5: 5:30-6:30 pm

To register for a meeting, please email ISSS at isss@middlebury.edu (subject line: FIS Host Program) or call us at 802.443.5858. Feel
free to bring your lunch if you attend an afternoon meeting.

You can learn more about
the FIS Host Program on our website at: http://www.middlebury.edu/international/isss/fis .

Please share this information with friends and family who do not work
at the College.

We invite all who are interested to become a
part of this wonderful program!

We look forward to hearing from you!

Stargazing at Mittelman Observatory – Summer 2019

Mittelman Observatory and Middlebury Physics will again host stargazing open house nights this summer. These Observatory events are scheduled for Wednesday evenings, June 26, July 3, July 24, July 31, and August 7, from 9:00 PM until 10:30 PM, weather permitting.

Jupiter and Saturn will be in the evening sky on many of these dates. A variety of interesting stars, star clusters, and nebulae will also be visible through the Observatory’s telescopes. The Observatory includes a 24-inch telescope in a dome and smaller telescopes on the roof.

Observatory open house nights are free and open to the public. As these are minimal language events, they are also appropriate for Language Schools students. These events will take place only if the sky is expected to be mostly clear. Please check the Observatory web site at go/observatory or call the Observatory at 443-2266 after 7 PM on the evening of the event for weather status.

The 2019 Feminist of the Year Awards

Every
year on the Saturday before Mother’s Day, the Feminist Resource Center at
Chellis House celebrates all the nominees for the Feminist of the Year Award.
On May 11, 2019, a large group of Chellis House friends gathered in the
backyard to celebrate the strides we made during another successful school
year. Integral to making these strides are the many feminist activists and
knowledge producers who never tire of investing their intellectual and
emotional energy towards making this world a more equitable place. After
enjoying delicious treats and the poetry of GSFS major Sam Boudreau ’19, we
honored the award winners. Language in Motion Coordinator Kristen Mullins
garnered the prize in the staff category. Her nominator noted that “Kristen [had] devoted the past five years
to promoting and deepening cultural understanding on this campus, in the local
communities through her K-12 outreach, and in Japan through her Japan Summer
Service Learning program. For years now she has led community-focused anti-bias
response trainings. Students and staff alike have found them tremendously
helpful.”

         This year, the committee decided to
distinguish two professors in the faculty category. Eliza Garrison, Associate
Professor of History of Art and Architecture, was lauded for “consistently
bringing a feminist lens to her classes in the Art History department. In
particular, her class ‘Medieval Bodies’ in fall 2018 analyzed how women and
other (literally) marginalized people were treated in medieval art and what the
social and political ramifications of these representations were.” In all of
her classes, Professor Garrison makes a point “both to assign feminist analyses
of works of art and to discuss misogyny and othering in art.” The other
professor who won the award was Lana Povitz, Visiting Assistant Professor of
History. Her nominator highlighted her ability “to craft socially conscious and relevant syllabi in
all of her classes, which require students to engage with the highly political world
around them, allowing no one to remain apathetic or ignorant of the issues that
dictate our lives. Her assignments allow students to self implicate, explore
their own narratives, and counter traditional modes of history that sustain
patriarchy.”

         This year, the selection committee
decided to distinguish five students with the award although many more had been
nominated. Throughout their four-year career at Middlebury, Miranda de Beer ’19
and Mika Morton ’19 often engaged in activism in tandem. By conceiving the
“Middlebury 5K: Steps Towards Reproductive Justice” three years ago, they
created an event with staying power. The event now draws close to 100 people who learn about
reproductive justice through signs on the golf course while running or walking.
They expand their knowledge at t-shirt making activities after the event where the
event leaders are on site to talk about reproductive justice and hand-out
pamphlets. Mika and Miranda also created a template for other students to
continue their effort.

         Mika and Miranda often collaborated
with Toria Isquith ’19, Grace Vedock ’20 and Rebecca Wishnie ’20. Toria raised
awareness about the reproductive dangers associated with the proliferation of crisis
pregnancy centers that pose as health care facilities to spread misinformation
about pregnancy and abortion. For her senior project with Professor Carly
Thomsen, Toria developed the “Bonefish” animation series, which brings to light
the realities of abortion access and lived experience for women seeking
reproductive healthcare.

In addition to being an activist against sexual violence and
helping establish a digital archive for feminist activism at Middlebury,
Rebecca Wishnie investigated the power dynamics of the Charles Murray visit
throughout the past school year. In the course, “Gender and the Making of
Space,” and at the student symposium, she examined how the architecture of
McCullough helped to lend an air of legitimacy to Murray’s visit. For the 2018
Student Summer Symposium, Rebecca, together with Professor Sujata Moorti,
investigated state-sanctioned violence and state-sanctioned mourning by comparing
the film series The Handmaid’s Tale
with the Charles Murray visit.

         Over the past three years at
Middlebury. Grace Vedock has demonstrated a great passion for combating sexual
violence. Tirelessly collaborating with Taite Shomo ’20.5 in the “It Happens
Here” speak-out, she also testified before the Vermont State Committee on
Education in favor of a bill that supports victims of campus sexual assault in
Vermont. Grace also is a strong advocate on behalf of all queer students who
were affected by this voices contesting their humanity on this campus.

         Please congratulate all the winners
when you see them.

Caption: 2019 Feminists of the Year Toria Isquith ’19, Miranda de Beer ’19, Professor Lana Povitz, Grace Vedock ’20, and Mika Morton ’19. Not pictured: Professor Eliza Garrison, Language in Motion Coordinator Kristen Mullins, and Rebecca Wishnie ’10.