Pre-Revels ’18: Crescendo
Crescendo offered budding musicians a chance to flaunt their talent. Audiences were treated all week long, to memorable evenings filled with soulful tunes from different genres all over the world.
Crescendo offered budding musicians a chance to flaunt their talent. Audiences were treated all week long, to memorable evenings filled with soulful tunes from different genres all over the world.
The sixth edition of the annual kite flying festival, Tarang, saw innumerable people reliving their childhood memories flying kites at End Point. The event, which also served as a social awareness campaign, had people from all walks of life come together to celebrate the joy of living and giving.
Aiming to help participants strengthen their memory retention and logical and analytical thinking, Psychus conducted the Speed Memory Workshop, as a part of Pre-Revels’18. Considering exams are right around the corner, maybe memory hacks are just what we need!
Time. A subject that has plagued us from the very beginning of our existence. Though mankind acquiring the skill to measure time appears to be a godsend, all it really did was set us up for our own downfall. Life as we know it would
With their Open Mic, Goonj provided a platform for students to talk about love and share their experiences with it. Participants expressed themselves through poems, stories, and narrations.
Lakshya, the up and coming agriculture club of MIT, hosted Dr Natraj B V’s seminar on Technology in Agriculture and the Opportunities It Presents. The seminar focused on the latest technology in agriculture- a field that doesn’t often get the limelight it deserves.
If you love playing around with words, calling people out on their mistakes or mesmerizing the audience with your verses, Paradigm Shift’s Pre-Revels Workshop for JAM and Slam Poetry events was the place to be. A mix of information and demos, the workshop left the audience feeling pumped up for the forthcoming Revels events.
TED Global leads by the motto ‘ideas worth spreading’. And with this adage in mind, nine remarkable speakers from different walks of life found themselves standing on one stage with a common purpose—to transcend boundaries with their innovative ideas.
The first edition of the Manipal Model WHO saw students from different disciplines coming together to discuss climate change related health issues and policies.
We recently got the opportunity to chat with Dr Gayathri Prabhu, the Coordinator of the Student Support Centre, which is the first of its kind in an Indian University. Joined by the psychologists running the show- Ms Debasmita Phukan, Ms Kangkana Bhuyan, and Mr Shafeer