Skip date selector
Skip to beginning of date selector
April 2025
May 2025
June 2025
July 2025
August 2025
Friday, May 9, 2025
- All daySubjects with final exam — no test may be given...
- All daySubjects with no final exam — Undergraduate...
- All dayThesis due for June degrees other than doctoral.
- 1:00 AM1hBaseball vs. Emerson CollegeTime: 3:30 PMLocation: Cambridge, MA
- 1:00 AM1hMen's Tennis vs. Springfield CollegeTime: 3:00 PMLocation: Cambridge, MA
- 1:00 AM1hMen's Track and Field vs. NEWMAC ChampionshipsTime:Location: South Hadley, MA / Mt. Holyoke College
- 1:00 AM1hSoftball vs. Brandeis UniversityTime: 4:00 PMLocation: Cambridge, MA
- 1:00 AM1hWomen's Lightweight Crew vs. Gordon CollegeTime:Location: Cambridge, MA
- 1:00 AM1hWomen's Tennis vs. Salve Regina UniversityTime: 12:00 PMLocation: Cambridge, MA
- 1:00 AM1hWomen's Track and Field vs. Penn RelaysTime:Location: Philadelphia, PA / University of Pennsylvania
- 10:00 AM1hChemistry Student Seminar (CSS) - Tolik Borisov (Surendranath)Chemistry Student Seminar (CSS) is a student-organized seminar series that host graduate students and postdocs to share their research in a friendly and informal environment. Free donuts and coffee are provided.
- 10:00 AM1h 30mEnglish Conversation GroupMeet other MS&PC members from all over the world, get resources and information about life at MIT/Cambridge/Boston, exchange ideas, and engage in cultural conversations in a friendly and casual environment, while working on English fluency.Please email ecgatmit@gmail.com for more information.
- 10:00 AM1h 30mMIT GHI Spring 2025 Events | 2nd GHI Forum: The Good Life: Religions, Philosophies & SciencesJoin us for the 2025 SECOND GLOBAL HUMANITIES FORUM! This session introduces The Good Life: Religions, Philosophies & Sciences pillar inviting participants to explore how religious, philosophical, and scientific ways of thinking and being can foster good lives and good living in an uncertain world.2nd GHI Forum· Title: The Good Life: Religions, Philosophies & Sciences · Date: April 11, 10:00–11:30 AM EDT · Where: Online (Zoom link and Online Registration HERE) · Speakers: Rafal K. Stepien, Simran Jeet Singh, Andreas Ohlemacher, Wiebke Denecke【Abstract】How do religious, philosophical, and scientific ways of thinking and being nurture good lives? Taking this as a foundational question, this Forum of the MIT Global Humanities Intitiative is devoted to bringing greater clarity and honesty into our understandings of belief, reason, and human discovery in all its myriad dimensions. Hosted by the MIT Pillar on ‘The Good Life’, the Forum outlines the challenges facing our endeavor, discusses and debates diverse conceptions of the good life stemming from several of the world’s intellectual traditions and devotional practices, explores the experiential potential of engaged scholarship in the first-person, and proposes ways to harvest the meaning-making potentials of religions, philosophies, and sciences in the service of more cosmopolitan modes of inter-personal, inter-communal, and inter-religious human flourishing.Looking forward to seeing you at our events!The GHI Team————————JOIN OUR MAILING LIST (LINK) to get the latest announcements about our programs, and registration links!MIT Global Humanities Initiative Spring Events 2025GHI FORUM SERIES1st GHI ForumTitle: Cognition, Learning & Human FlourishingDate: February 21, 8:00–9:30 AM ESTSpeakers: Jonas Mago, Justus Wachs2nd GHI ForumTitle: The Good Life: Religions, Philosophies & SciencesDate: April 11, 10:00–11:30 AM EDTSpeakers: Rafal K. Stepien, Simran Jeet Singh, Andreas Ohlemacher, Wiebke Denecke3rd GHI ForumTitle: Public Literacies: Civic Systems, Media & Emotional IntelligenceDate: May 9, 10:00–11:30 AM EDTSpeakers: Richard Eberhardt, Gabor Hollbeck, Mikael Jakobsson4th GHI ForumTitle: Good Governance in Bad TimesDate: June 6, 10:00–11:30 AM EDTSpeakers: Wiebke Denecke, Johannes Makar, Michael PuettLAUNCH EVENTS:Launching the “Legacies for Our Future” Challenge: Celebrate the Planet with Mike Block, and Korean Folk Painting ExperienceWith Kim Jae-Hui, the Consul General of the Republic of Korea in BostonChung Byungmo, Director of the School of Minhwa (Korean Folk Painting)Kwak Yunmi, Minhwa ArtistTime: May 14 2025, 4:00-6:00 PMLocation: Edward and Joyce Linde Music Building @ MIT (Building W18: 201 Amherst St, Cambridge, MA 02139)CELEBRATE: Launch of the Asian Hub of MIT’s Global Humanities Initiative at Korea UniversityLocation: Korea University, SeoulDate: April 24-25, 2025SAVE THE DATE:4th Annual Conference of the MIT Comparative Global Humanities InitiativeTitle: Creating Desirable Legacies for Our Future in an Age of STEM & Big TechLocation: Korea University, SeoulDate: November 20-21, 2025
- 10:00 AM2hAHA Adult CPR/AED TrainingUsing official American Heart Association material, this class covers CPR, AED usage, and choking. The class is one 2-hour session and costs $50 per person. After the class, you will be emailed a link to claim an AHA eCard, which can be used to verify you are CPR-certified.https://cpr.heart.org/en/cpr-courses-and-kits/heartsaver/heartsaver-cpr-aed-trainingPlease RSVP by filling out this google form: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdTSlRq3AyWgJCHv719EHia3T_RPItHH1IySpcgkbrDtkP4ZA/viewform?usp=dialog
- 11:00 AM1hStochastics and Statistics SeminarSpeaker: Siva Balakrishnan (Carnegie Mellon University)
- 12:00 PM50mMIT D-Lab TourA 50 minute, (usually) student-led tour of MIT D-Lab, D-Lab prototypes, and our workshop! Hear about the 23-year history of D-Lab, our founding director Amy Smith, our 12+ MIT classes, research groups, humanitarian innovation program and more! Not free at tour time? Stop by anytime to look around or email d-lab-tours@mit.edu.
- 12:00 PM1hAndrew Li, saxophonePresented by the Emerson/Harris Program for Private Study Solo Recital SeriesProgramTBDLivestream: https://mta.mit.edu/viewlisten/live-killian-hallAbout the PerformersAbout the Emerson/Harris Program for Private StudySupport for private musical study is available for students through the Emerson/Harris Program (E/HP), which offers merit-based financial awards for outstanding achievement on instruments or voice in classical, jazz, or world music. Each academic year, the program awards Scholarships and Fellowships to nearly seventy students who commit to a full year’s study and participate in the musical life of MIT.Auditions for the program are held at the beginning of each academic year. Private teacher selections, made in consultation with the E/HP jury heads, may include instructors from MIT staff and throughout Greater Boston. The Emerson/Harris Program is funded by the late Mr. Cherry L. Emerson, Jr. (SM, 1941), in response to an appeal from AssociateProvost Ellen T. Harris (Class of 1949 Professor Emeritus of Music). The Emerson/Harris Masterclass Series is supported, in part, by the Robert L. Malster (1956) Fund.
- 1:00 PM4hMIT Chemistry UROP Symposium1pm-5pm: presentations in 32-1553pm-5pm: poster session/refeshments in Building 18 Lobby
- 1:30 PM1hThesis Defense: Nick Mathey-AndrewsJacks lab I "Lineage transitions dictate response and resistance to KRAS inhibition in NSCLC"
- 2:45 PM15mMIT@2:50 - Ten Minutes for Your MindTen minutes for your mind@2:50 every day at 2:50 pm in multiple time zones:Europa@2:50, EET, Athens, Helsinki (UTC+2) (7:50 am EST) https://us02web.zoom.us/j/88298032734Atlantica@2:50, EST, New York, Toronto (UTC-4) https://us02web.zoom.us/j/85349851047Pacifica@2:50, PST, Los Angeles, Vancouver (UTC=7) (5:50 pm EST) https://us02web.zoom.us/j/85743543699Almost everything works better again if you unplug it for a bit, including your mind. Stop by and unplug. Get the benefits of mindfulness without the fuss.@2:50 meets at the same time every single day for ten minutes of quiet together.No pre-requisite, no registration needed.Visit the website to view all @2:50 time zones each day.at250.org or at250.mit.edu
- 3:00 PM1hTristan Yang, pianoPresented by the Emerson/Harris Program for Private Study Solo Recital SeriesProgramTBDLivestream: https://mta.mit.edu/viewlisten/live-killian-hallAbout the PerformersAbout the Emerson/Harris Program for Private StudySupport for private musical study is available for students through the Emerson/Harris Program (E/HP), which offers merit-based financial awards for outstanding achievement on instruments or voice in classical, jazz, or world music. Each academic year, the program awards Scholarships and Fellowships to nearly seventy students who commit to a full year’s study and participate in the musical life of MIT.Auditions for the program are held at the beginning of each academic year. Private teacher selections, made in consultation with the E/HP jury heads, may include instructors from MIT staff and throughout Greater Boston. The Emerson/Harris Program is funded by the late Mr. Cherry L. Emerson, Jr. (SM, 1941), in response to an appeal from AssociateProvost Ellen T. Harris (Class of 1949 Professor Emeritus of Music). The Emerson/Harris Masterclass Series is supported, in part, by the Robert L. Malster (1956) Fund.
- 4:00 PM1h2025 Edward M. Scolnick Prize Lecture in Neuroscience with Leslie VosshallScolnick Award: The Scolnick Prize is awarded annually by the McGovern Institute to recognize outstanding advances in the field of neuroscience. The prize is named in honor of Edward M. Scolnick, who stepped down as president of Merck Research Laboratories in December 2002 after holding Merck’s top research post for 17 years. Scolnick is now at the Broad Institute, where he established the Stanley Center for Psychiatric Research. He also served as a member of the McGovern Institute’s scientific advisory board. The prize, which is endowed through a gift from Merck to the McGovern Institute, consists of a $200,000 award, plus an inscribed gift.Date: Friday, May 9 Time: 4:00pm Location: 46-3002, Singleton Auditorium (Third floor of MIT Building 46) This is an in-person event, followed by a reception.2025 Speaker: Leslie B. Vosshall, PhDTalk Title: Mosquitoes: neurobiology of the world’s most dangerous animalAbstract: One of the most fascinating observations in sensory neuroscience is that the brain can adapt to the loss of one sense by increasing the sensitivity of another sense. Well-described examples in humans include increases in auditory and tactile perception in blind individuals and increases in visual and tactile perception in deaf individuals. The underlying mechanisms, where they have been studied, typically involve functional reorganization of primary sensory cortex with new innervation of the compensatory sense into brain areas formerly occupied by the lost sense. We have discovered an unexpected mechanism of long-range sensory compensation in the mosquito. Loss of an olfactory pathway causes a dramatic increase in a thermosensory pathway. What makes this fascinating is that the compensation occurs across sensory organs located on completely different body parts. These results show that mosquitoes have robust mechanisms to maintain maximum sensitivity to humans if they lose a key sensory modality.Bio: Leslie B Vosshall PhD is the Robin Chemers Neustein Professor and head of the Laboratory of Neurogenetics and Behavior at The Rockefeller University, as well as Vice President and Chief Scientific Officer of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. Vosshall is a molecular neurobiologist who studies how behaviors emerge from the integration of sensory input with internal physiological states, with a specific focus on host-seeking and blood-feeding by mosquitoes that spread dangerous viruses. Vosshall is a vocal proponent of pre-prints and open science, as well as a strong supporter of inclusion in STEM. Her ongoing initiatives at HHMI aim to enhance the culture and climate in HHMI laboratories by fostering inclusive mentoring.
- 5:00 PM1hAlex Miller, celloPresented by the Emerson/Harris Program for Private Study Solo Recital SeriesProgramTBDLivestream: https://mta.mit.edu/viewlisten/live-killian-hallAbout the PerformersAbout the Emerson/Harris Program for Private StudySupport for private musical study is available for students through the Emerson/Harris Program (E/HP), which offers merit-based financial awards for outstanding achievement on instruments or voice in classical, jazz, or world music. Each academic year, the program awards Scholarships and Fellowships to nearly seventy students who commit to a full year’s study and participate in the musical life of MIT.Auditions for the program are held at the beginning of each academic year. Private teacher selections, made in consultation with the E/HP jury heads, may include instructors from MIT staff and throughout Greater Boston. The Emerson/Harris Program is funded by the late Mr. Cherry L. Emerson, Jr. (SM, 1941), in response to an appeal from AssociateProvost Ellen T. Harris (Class of 1949 Professor Emeritus of Music). The Emerson/Harris Masterclass Series is supported, in part, by the Robert L. Malster (1956) Fund.
- 7:00 PM2hMovie Night: Reel RockJoin the MIT Outing Club for the 19th Annual REEL ROCK Film Tour, premiering the best new climbing films. Free popcorn will be provided, while supplies last! 🍿🌃Feel free to bring a blanket or chair along.Reel Rock 19 showcases three world-premiere climbing films spanning disciplines, characters, and continents: a heartfelt story of second chances in love and climbing on Squamish’s legendary Cobra Crack; an outrageous 18-day big wall epic on Patagonia’s towering Torre Central; and the pursuit of a lifelong dream—a 5.15 first ascent—made possible by an unlikely partnership.
- 7:30 PM2hMIT GradHillel May Shabbat DinnerJoin your fellow grad students for food and good company!Come make new friends, or hang with your old friends, over food, shabbat rituals, and lively conversations!
- 8:00 PM1hMIT Wind Ensemble: Global Jubilance—Music from Europe, Latin America, Asia, and the USThe MIT Wind Ensemble concludes its 24-25 season with an exciting program of works by composers from eleven countries. The concert includes the Boston premiere of “El Arte Del Bolero” Suite, arranged by Shimon Gambourg, featuring music from the Latin American Songbook, Gustav Holst’s masterpiece Hammersmith, Courtly Airs and Dancesby the late Ron Nelson, Bach’s famed Toccata and Fugue in D minor, arranged by Donald Hunsberger, MIT alumnus Scott Stransky’s Suite from an Imaginary Movie (dedicated to the memory of Debra and Keith Stransky), and chamber works by Gabrieli, Glazounow, Yagisawa, and others.Learn more about the MIT Wind Ensemble here.*Pre-registrations are for paid General Admission tickets only. MIT Students, Faculty, and Staff may attend for free by showing their MIT ID at the door, pending availability of space.Seating PolicyYour registration through Eventbrite guarantees you a seat until 15 minutes before the event start time. 15 minutes before the concert start time, we will release open seats to the standby list. If you were not able to register through Eventbrite, you may join the physical standby line in the Kresge Auditorium Lobby up to one hour before the concert start time.Don't miss a downbeat! Click here to subscribe to the Events Newsletter.