All News
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Roberta L. Krueger, the Burgess Professor of French, contributed an essay, "The Middle Ages and the Renaissance: from Marie de France to Marie de Romieu," in Norman Shapiro, transl., French Women Poets of Nine Centuries: The Distaff and the Pen (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2008).
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Barbara Gold, the Edward North Professor of Classics, gave an invited lecture at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst on Dec. 4. The title of the talk was "Inhuman She-Wolves and Unhelpful Mothers in Propertius's Elegies: A Consideration of Roman Mothers and Some Remarks on their Colonial American Counterparts." The last segment of the talk arose from an Emerson grant that Gold did last summer with Hamilton senior Casey Green, who is a classics and history major.
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A feature article written by Casey Wick, assistant director of custodial services, appears in the November/December issue of Facilities Manager magazine titled "From Here to There: Effectively Managing Organization Change." APPA, an organization of educational facilities professionals that, according to its Web site, "promotes excellence in all phases of educational facilities management, including administration, planning, design, construction, energy/utilities, maintenance, and operations" is the magazine publisher.
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Assistant Professor of Japanese Kyoko Omori spoke at a University of Sydney, Australia, workshop on December 3-4. The workshop focused on a Japanese vernacular modernist magazine, Shinseinen (New Youth). Shinseinen enjoyed its heyday in the 1920s-30s by providing youth with (occasionally experimental) detective fiction, photographs, illustrations, and essays on the latest cultural phenomena.
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The Hamilton College Orchestra will give a free performance on Thursday, Dec. 11, at 8 p.m. in Wellin Hall, Schambach Center for the Performing Arts. The program will feature Rossini, La Gazza Ladra; Faure, Pavane; Saint-Saens, Cello Concerto No. 1; and Dvorak, Symphony No. 8 in G Major. Florent Renard-Payen will perform as cello soloist.
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Levitt Center Associate Director of Community Research Judith Owens-Manley was the keynote speaker at the Civic Engagement Conference at St. Lawrence University on Wednesday, Dec. 10. Owen's remarks, titled "Civic Engagement: Connecting College and Community," were delivered to faculty, administrators, students and community partners at this conference sponsored by the university's Center for Civic Engagement.
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Eight members of Hamilton's class of 2009 were elected last week to the Epsilon chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, the nation's oldest honor society. The students are Louisa Brown, Keith Gross, Xiaobo Ma, Chelsea Mann, Timothy Minella, Li Qiu, Aaron Richterman and Michael Sennott.
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Hong Gang Jin, the William R. Kenan Professor of East Asian Languages and Literature, presented two lectures in Hong Kong this semester. In October she spoke at the Hong Kong Institute of Education, Department of Chinese, on "Effects of Negotiation of Meaning in Conversations of Chinese as a Foreign Language (CFL): An Empirical Study on CFL Production." In November Jin presented a workshop at Hong Kong International School titled "The Backward Curricular Design and Assessment in CFL." This concerned the concept, design and implementation of modern Chinese curriculum with an end in mind.
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An art installation by Allie Pohl '07 at Denver International Airport is featured in a USA Today photo gallery titled "Airport Art Roundup: Best Exhibits at a Terminal Near You" (12/10/08). Pohl's piece, "Tree Covered in Snow," is part of the No Place Like Home exhibit in Denver. The piece, which stands at about 6'5" and is about 4 feet wide, is made of socks. Pohl says she spray painted some, used dye on others, and some are store bought. Pohl majored in communication and art at Hamilton.
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Hamilton College women's soccer player Erica Dressler '09 (Farmington, Conn./Miss Porter's School) has been selected to the 2008 all-region team by the National Soccer Coaches Association of America.
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