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  • Alex Cook ’20 is spending his summer researching a project he devised: “Combating Deception in Genocide.” His work is taking him from case studies to interviews with reporters and staff at NGOs, nonprofits, and government organizations.

  • Alan Cafruny, the Henry Platt Bristol Chair of International Affairs and Professor of Government, recently participated in a privatization workshop at the University of East London and was a member of a panel at the Left Forum Conference at Long Island University.

  • Ann Owen, the Henry Platt Bristol Professor of Economics, spoke with American Public Media's Marketplace reporter Renata Sago about the possible effects of President Trump’s tariffs on Chinese goods and how the Federal Reserve might react to any economic impact those tariffs might have.

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  • Forty members of the Class of 2023 began getting a head start on college when they arrived on June 30 for the Opportunity Programs intensive academic college transition program.

  • Barbara Gold, the Edward North Professor of Classics and Greek Literature Emerita, recently gave an invited talk titled “Were Female Martyrs Transgender?” at the University of Cyprus.

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  • Before her graduation from Hamilton, Katie Tenefrancia ’19 packed up and headed to Fort Benning, Ga., where she began the Armor Basic Officer Leader’s Course.

  • Maggie Ryan, a rising junior, is spending the summer working on an Emerson project that investigates non-commutative algebra. She is one of 200 Hamilton students who are doing summer research or an internship supported by the College.

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  • Roberta (Bonnie) Krueger, the Burgess Professor of French, presented a paper during the 10th International Colloquium on Christine de Pizan at the University Sorbonne Nouvelle - Paris 3.

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  • Some four years ago, heading into retirement, college professors Stewart Herman ’70 and his wife, Linda, mustered their courage and an army of architects, builders, and engineers to transform their 1907 Minneapolis home into a showpiece for green technology. They finished the job in March 2017.

  • In a room full of aspiring law students and philosophy academics, Assistant Professor of Psychology Keelah Williams’ discussion on imposter syndrome does not seem inherently related to the Hamilton College Summer Program in Philosophy (HCSPiP). After days of debating and applying various philosophical theories, a talk on the mechanics of imposter phenomenon might have come off as on anomaly to the students and scholars on campus for the two-week philosophy program.

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