Class of 2018: Related Content

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When Karina Gonzalez Perez ’25 returned to campus this past fall, she approached Assistant Director of Student Engagement Jack de Loos ’22 about getting the long running co-ed soccer club off to a good start. Little did she know that de Loos already had a plan underway.

¿­ÐýÃŹÙÍø College celebrated the achievements of the Class of 2018 at Commencement this year with speaker Liz Lerman, who bestowed upon graduates a series of wishes for their futures.

For many young adults, college is the first time they get to independently navigate their own lives. From incorporating feedback from professors into developed projects to managing and balancing course requirements with personal relationships and work experiences, college is intended to be demanding for all students.

Ayesha Raees ’18 has been selected as an Asian American Writers’ Workshop (AAWW) 2018/19 Margins Fellow.

Over spring break at the Village School of North ¿­ÐýÃŹÙÍø (VSNB), ¿­ÐýÃŹÙÍø students transformed the gymnasium into a hands-on science museum.

When students in Richard MacPike’s unwrapped the silk scarves they had dyed using arashi and itajime techniques, they were surprised by the results they found.  

How can food capture what makes a community distinctive? As a graduating senior studying Visual Arts, Public Action, and Dance, Isabella Poulos ’18 has devoted her time at ¿­ÐýÃŹÙÍø to studying the intersection of food, art, and community.

"The next passenger should be coming in for secondary screening any moment now. You know the drill. Don’t take too long.â€

In a partnership with the Vermont Arts Exchange (VAE), In Short, the Minor opens at the North ¿­ÐýÃŹÙÍø Train Depot and runs through the weekend.

Co-organized by faculty member Jon Isherwood and ¿­ÐýÃŹÙÍø Museum curator Jamie Franklin, 3D Digital: Here and Now is a collaboration between ¿­ÐýÃŹÙÍø College and the ¿­ÐýÃŹÙÍø Museum that highlights artists, designers, and manufacturers whose work exploits the potential of new technologies to push material practice. The exhibition runs through June 15.

On October 2015, students in a course taught by faculty member Benjamin Anastas launched a blog tracing ¿­ÐýÃŹÙ꿉۪s outsized impact on the world of literature and asking what accounts for it.  features author interviews, short pieces of journalism and reviews, and coverage of literary events on campus.