More from Events Calendar
- Nov 6All dayExhibit NOW in IMES E25-310, from May 23 onward! Stop by to visit and learn more!
- Nov 61:00 AMField Hockey vs. Wheaton College (Mass.)Time: 12:00 PMLocation: Norton, MA
- Nov 61:00 AMMen's Soccer vs. Wheaton CollegeTime: 1:00 PMLocation: Cambridge, MA
- Nov 61:00 AMWomen's Soccer vs. Babson CollegeTime: 1:00 PMLocation: Babson Park, MA
- Nov 68:00 AMEmTech MITNavigate the future of technology with confidenceFor over 25 years, EmTech MIT has been the trusted destination for established senior executives and emerging leaders, researchers, and entrepreneurs to stay ahead of change. Curated by the expert editors of MIT Technology Review, our flagship technology event delivers the clarity and insight you need to navigate uncertainty and lead with conviction.Join us on November 4-6 at the MIT Media Lab for EmTech MIT 2025, MIT Technology Review’s flagship event on transformative technology for business leaders.Learn more and register: emtechmit.com.Contact MIT Technology Review with any questions and discount opportunities.**Discounts are available to the MIT community. Register here with your MIT email address and save 40%.
- Nov 610:00 AMInk, Stone, and Silver Light: A Century of Cultural Heritage Preservation in AleppoOn view October 1 -- December 11, 2025This exhibition draws on archival materials from the Aga Khan Documentation Center at MIT (AKDC) to explore a century of cultural heritage preservation in Aleppo, Syria. It takes as its point of departure the work of Kamil al-Ghazzi (1853–1933), the pioneering Aleppine historian whose influential three-volume chronicle, Nahr al-Dhahab fī Tārīkh Ḥalab (The River of Gold in the History of Aleppo), was published between 1924 and 1926.Ink, Stone, and Silver Light presents three modes of documentation—manuscript, built form, and photography—through which Aleppo’s urban memory has been recorded and preserved. Featuring figures such as Michel Écochard and Yasser Tabbaa alongside al-Ghazzi, the exhibition traces overlapping efforts to capture the spirit of a city shaped by commerce, craft, and coexistence. At a time when Syria again confronts upheaval and displacement, these archival fragments offer models for preserving the past while envisioning futures rooted in dignity, knowledge, and place.