All News
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Professor Zillah Eisteinstein from the Politics department of Ithaca College will deliver a lecture, "Feminisms and September 11's Aftermath," on Monday, Nov. 26, at 6 p.m. in KJ Auditorium. This event is free and open to the public.
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Ben Moore, a 1982 graduate of Hamilton, is receiving acclaim for both his artistic and musical composition skills. Tenor Robert White sang an Irish ballad composed by Moore at the Metropolitan Museum of Art's 21st Century Commissions concert on Saturday, Nov. 17. White called Moore's work "one of the most beautiful Irish ballads I could want to sing. It made me choke up." Moore's paintings "Fort Tryone Park -- Morning," "Coxcombs," and "14th Street" provide the cover art for the latest CDs (Hyperion) of world renowned pianist Stephen Hough.
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Former Assistant Dean of Students and Director of Multicultural Affairs Karen Green will return to the Hamilton campus for a Gospel Music Jubilee on Saturday, Nov. 17 at 7 p.m. in the Chapel. The performance will feature Kirk Hatcher of Montgomery, AL, Edward Menafee of Atlanta, GA, Dean Karen Green and students from Wells College and Hamilton students who are in the process of forming a gospel choir.
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The Hamilton Humane Organization's Third Annual Silent Auction will be held on Saturday, Nov. 17, from 12-7 p.m. at the Kirkland Arts Center. Bid on a wide variety of different items and help a great cause. Items include local artwork, restaurant gift certificates, music, autographed celebrity posters, massages, haircuts, tanning sessions and concert tickets. All proceeds benefit local animal shelters. The Humane Organization will accept donations for the auction until noon on Saturday. Contact Liz Evans to contribute x2990.
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Margaret Bundy Scott Professor of Comparative Literature Nancy Rabinowitz presented a paper at the 13th Annual Barnard Feminist Art History Conference, held Nov. 10-11. She participated in the panel, Representing Classical Women, with a paper titled "Doing Gender with Clothes on Fifth Century Vase Painting."
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Professor of Chinese Hong Gang Jin participated in the American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages annual convention in November. She chaired a panel on psycholinguistic approaches to course design, presentation and engagement. Her paper was titled "Evidence of Interlanguage Studies and Target Structure Selection."
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Original compositions by 13 students in MUS 277, Music for Contemporary Media, at Hamilton College can be heard on-line at http://academics.hamilton.edu/music/spellman/studio/archives The students are members of a class taught by Professor of Music Samuel Pellman, who also serves as director of the Studio for Contemporary Music. The class provides experience with the aesthetics and techniques of the modern recording studio, including the use of sound synthesizers, digital samplers and MIDI. These compositions are encoded as Standard MIDI Files and can be played on any PC that has a sound card or any Mac that has the Quicktime Musical Instruments installed (in the System Folder).
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The Campus Activities Board will welcome comedian Keith Robinson on Saturday, Nov. 17 at 8 p.m. in the Fillius Events Barn.
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Visiting Instructor of Religious Studies Scott Seay presented a paper at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Religion, Nov. 16-20. His paper was titled "Rapists and Arsonists: Racial Stereotypes and Capital Crime in Colonial New England." It explored how eighteenth-century New England ministers reflected and reinforced popular stereotypes of race and crime in sermons that were delivered immediately prior to public executions.
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"Biological Weapons - a terror that will not go away" will be the theme of Think Tank on Friday, Nov. 16 at noon in KJ 222. Biology Professor Jinnie Garrett and students enrolled in Bio448: Seminar in Molecular Genetics, will discuss the potential for the development and use of genetically modified organisms as new agents of bioterrorism.