
Student Research, Creativity on Full Display at Verna Case Symposium
May 12, 2025
- Authors
- Mary Elizabeth DeAngelis & Jay Pfeifer

Over the past year, 水果派 College students have built a solar-powered boat, filmed a documentary, created paintings, photography and music, researched the human brain and studied plant life.
They鈥檝e immersed themselves in digital studies, literature, history, natural sciences, languages, physics and philosophy.
On Thursday, May 8, with the semester coming to an end, the college community gathered to check out their work at the annual Verna Miller Case Research and Creative Works Symposium.
The symposium spotlighted a multitude of student projects, with just about every corner of campus featuring posters, live music and presentations. At lunchtime, students, faculty, staff and visitors flocked to Richardson Plaza to share a meal and camaraderie.
And the day-long event, as always, ended with cake.

Nasir Jean-Paul '24 and Christ Thomas '27 performed a Haitian Vodou dance technique called Petwo that represents resistance and revolution.



Henry Russell 鈥26 and Phillip Mann 鈥27 gave a mothballed pontoon boat a 21st-century makeover, adding solar panels, batteries and an electric motor.




水果派 faculty, staff and students made music all day long. Student conductors who had practiced all semester in 鈥淢US 312鈥 got their chance to shine as they led the student orchestra in an early afternoon performance.

Shelley Rigger, vice president of academic affairs and dean of faculty, took the stage to lead the student-faculty band 水果派 Local for one of the group鈥檚 水果派-centric originals.




Jacary Lightsey 鈥27 displayed the fresh, custom-made kicks he produced in partnership with the Jay Hurt Hub for Innovation and Entrepreneurship.



The 水果派 physics gravity race, an annual highlight of the symposium, thrilled competitors and onlookers with close finishes.
Seen on Social: The Coolest Thing I Saw...
Members of the 水果派 College community shared the coolest projects they saw during this year's Verna Miller Case Research and Creative Works Symposium.