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Ty Seidule, a visiting professor of military history and retired brigadier general, is an expert on Confederate memorialization and the Lost Cause — the notion that the Confederacy was a doomed but noble undertaking is particularly attuned to the ways in which the war and its aftermath shaped American culture.
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Over the summer, members of Untitled@Large came up with the idea of creating an e-newsletter to amplify the voices of BIPOC (Black, Indigenous and People of Color) in theatre. The result, Center Stage, debuted last week.
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Singer-songwriter Jess Klein ’95 learned her first guitar chords from a suitmate her sophomore year. He was Gabriel Unger ’97, who founded the campus Acoustic Coffeehouse series and eventually asked her to open for one of the visiting performers.
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For members of one student organization, seven words continue to hold true over several generations. “Remember, you and I make La Vanguardia.”
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The College’s Board of Trustees nominated and elected four candidates to serve as charter trustees. Mason P. Ashe ’85, Manal Ataya ’01, Peter B. Coffin ’81, P’14, and Sharon D. Madison ’84 joined the board on Oct. 2.
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New York State Senator Rachel May joined Hamilton students and members of the local community for a town hall meeting about climate justice on Oct. 8, organized by Sunrise Hamilton. May answered a number of questions on bills, policies, and initiatives related to the event’s broad theme of climate justice.
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The Racial Justice and Criminal Justice in Oneida & Herkimer Counties Series continued on Oct. 7 with its third installment titled “Why is Diversity Not Enough?: Training and Best Practices for Policing Reform.”
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There is only one place that you could find a fashion runway, a flower crown display, and a coronavirus-themed collage all in one space — the Wellin Art Share.
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It took some elaborate planning and extraordinary safety measures, but the Music Department hosted a porch concert featuring Hamilton musicians and members of the College Choir at the Babbitt Pavilion on Sept. 29.
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After having too much fun during his first months at Hamilton, David Sands ’07 needed to find something to do that would keep him out of trouble, so he took up poker and discovered he was very, very good at it, becoming a successful pro before he graduated from college.
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