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  • The Hamilton College Department of Theatre will present Marlane Meyer's Etta Jenks as its fall theatre production. Performances are Thursday - Saturday, Nov. 8-10 and Wednesday – Saturday, Nov. 14-17 at 8 p.m., and a matinée on Nov. 10 at 2 p.m., all in Minor Theater. The performance is under the direction of Professor Carole Bellini-Sharp, with lighting design by Bill Burd, costume design by Amy Svoboda and set design by John Pollard. This play contains adult content and is not suitable for children under 16.

  • More than 1,900 students and their families will congregate on the Hill on Nov. 9-11 for Hamilton's annual Family Weekend. The weekend will include something for everyone, from athletic contests and concerts to a book discussion and educational family colleges.

  • Hamilton College will host a panel discussion on local sustainability efforts titled "Global Problems, Regional Actions: Sustainability in the Mohawk Valley" on Tuesday, Nov. 13, at 7:30 p.m. in the KJ Red-Pit (Room 109). The event is free and open to the public.

  • Laura Purdy, the McCullough Visiting Professor of Philosophy, gave a talk titled "What is (Morally) Wrong with Emergency Contraception?" at the 3rd International Conference on Science and Ethics, on Nov. 2 in Berlin, Germany.

  • Eric Lane, the Eric J. Schmertz Distinguished Professor of Public Law and Public Service at Hofstra University School of Law, will present a lecture on Thursday, Nov. 8, at 7:30 p.m. in the Science Center Kennedy Auditorium. The lecture, titled "Can We Save Our Constitution through Love Alone?," is free and open to the public. It is sponsored by the Arthur Levitt Public Affairs Center.

  • Randy Ericson, the Couper Librarian, accepted the Outstanding Project for 2007 award from the Communal Societies Association on behalf of Hamilton College at the CSA annual meeting on Sept. 29. Hamilton received the award for the digitization of the Shaker periodical, variously titled The Shaker, Shaker and Shakeress, The Shaker Manifesto and The Manifesto. This publication ran from 1871 until 1899 and shared religious and political opinions between Shaker communities from Maine to Kentucky.

  • Blake Hulnick '09, who is studying in Washington, D.C. this semester through Hamilton's Program in Washington, is interning with the American Enterprise Institute. Hulnick co-authored a piece on overseas voters that appears on the AEI election reform Web site: http://www.electionreformproject.org/.

  • Christine Rathbun, a playwright and performer, presented her one-woman play, "Reconstruction: Or How I Learned to Pay Attention" on Monday, Nov. 5. The performance was sponsored by the Diversity and Social Justice Project's "Health Matters" series.

  • Nancy Sorkin Rabinowitz, the Margaret Bundy Scott Professor of Comparative Literature, presented her paper, "Tragedy and Empire, American Style," at an international conference on the appropriation of ancient empires within modern imperial cultures. Her paper focused on the play The Darker Face of the Earth, by Rita Dove, African-American writer and poet laureate (1993-95).

  • William M. LeoGrande has written five books on politics in Cuba and Central America, published articles in media including The New York Times and The New Republic, and served on both the Democratic Policy Committee of the U.S. Senate and the U.S. Council on Foreign Relations. On Monday, Nov. 5, he presented a lecture titled "Talking with Fidel: The Secret History of U.S.-Cuban Diplomacy" in the Chapel.

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