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  • Mount Holyoke College Professor of Religion Heath Atchley will discuss “Disturbing the Secular,” on Thursday, Oct. 22, at 4:10 p.m. in the Science Center’s Kennedy Auditorium. The lecture, the second in the Hamilton College Humanities Forum, is free and open to the public.

  • Hamilton is hosting a multicultural affairs conference on Thursday, Oct. 22, and Friday, Oct. 23. Attendees include administrators from the 30 member colleges and universities of the Consortium on High Achievement and Success (CHAS).

  • New York University Professor of Sociology and Director of Graduate Studies Eric Klinenberg presented a lecture on the “New Urban Crises” Wednesday evening in the Fillius Events Barn.  He addressed recently developing issues facing urban America, as a historically unprecedented number of America’s population now lives in or around major metropolitan areas.

  • Sharon Williams, director of Hamilton's Writing Center, participated in the annual meeting of the Ivy Plus Writing Consortium held Oct. 16-17 at Brown University.

  • The Hamilton College Theatre Department is hosting three lectures in a series called “Art and the Stage: Design for the Theatre.” They will all take place in Minor Theater on the Hamilton campus and are free and open to the public.

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  • Frontiers, A Journal of Women's Studies has published an essay by Professor of English Patricia O’Neill titled "Amelia Edwards's Travel Writing." The essay explores the role of travel in Edwards's career and, more generally, in Victorian women's intellectual life.

  • Andrew Dykstra, assistant professor of mathematics, gave a colloquium talk to the mathematics faculty at the University of Denver on Oct. 15. The talk was titled "Very Weakly, Loosely, and Vaguely Bernoulli." It focused on classes of dynamical systems that exhibit random behavior, but whose behavior is not quite as random as a simple coin toss.

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  • Robert L. Holmes, the McCullough Distinguished Visiting Professor of Political Philosophy at Hamilton, will give a lecture titled “The Gulf Wars, Western Imperialism, and the Just War Theory” in the Hamilton Science Center, room G041, on Wednesday, Oct. 21, at 4:15 p.m. The event is free and open to the public.

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  • James Bradfield, the Elias W. Leavenworth Professor of Economics, will present a talk titled "Money, Debt and the Fragility of the Financial Markets” on Wednesday, Oct. 21, at 7:30 p.m. at The Other Side in Utica. This is the second event in the 2009-2010 Imagining America collaboration between Hamilton and The Other Side.

  • Dr. Arlene Blum, executive director of the Green Science Policy Institute and a biophysical chemist, lectured about health risks associated with the widespread use of chemical flame retardants on Oct. 19 in the Science Center’s Kennedy Auditorium. The lecture was sponsored by the Chemistry Department and Outdoor Leadership Center.

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