Spring Student Symposium returns in person
By Emmanuel Tamrat | April 28, 2022The Spring Student Symposium returned in person for the first time since spring 2019 on Friday, April 22.
Emmanuel Tamrat '22 is Digital Director.
He began working for The Campus as a photographer and online editor in the fall of 2018, and previously served as senior online editor.
An Environmental Policy major, Tamrat hails from London, GB but calls Alexandria, VA home. At Middlebury, he is involved in Rethinking Economics and works as a Democracy Intiatives Intern with the CCE.
The Spring Student Symposium returned in person for the first time since spring 2019 on Friday, April 22.
Volume CXX, Issue 1 (September 16, 2021) Volume CXX, Issue 2 (September 23, 2021)
Two years after the college first introduced Energy2028, The Campus looks at how far Middlebury has come — and what remains to be done.
Today, The Campus presents its eighth issue of the spring semester. The stories [post_grid id='55231'] Today's Front Page https://issuu.com/middleburycampus/docs/front_page_5_6_21
The Spring Student Symposium returned in person for the first time since spring 2019 on Friday, April 22.
Lily Laesch ’23 gave an oral presentation titled "Geographies of Migration and Liminality: Placemaking on the Margins of the Calais Jungle" as part of the Spring Student Symposium on Friday, April 22.
Ciara Burke ’22 presented her research in a poster presentation in the Great Hall of Bicentenial Hall.
A group of students traveled to Portland, Me. on Monday, Nov. 8 to join a Milk with Dignity protest outside of the Hannaford headquarters.
Evolution Dance Crew performed for the first time in Wilson Hall since 2019 to a total audience of over 800 between their two shows.
Emmanuel TamratShifting to renewable energy is a key tenet of Energy2028.
Emmanuel TamratNocturne brought a semblance of normalcy to campus on Saturday night as students gathered around dance shows, musical acts, art installations and other exhibitions.
Emmanuel TamratStudents in search of Peace of Mind screenings will now need to schedule them at off campus facilities like Planned Parenthood rather than visiting Parton Center for Health and Wellness.