All News
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An article by Associate Professor of English and Assistant Dean of Faculty for Diversity Initiatives Steven Yao appears in the latest issue of the journal Representations (Summer, 2007). Yao's article, "Toward a Prehistory of Asian American Verse: Pound, Cathay, and the Poetics of Chineseness," examines the various terms -- tonal, rhetorical, thematic and formal -- by which Ezra Pound sought to present Chinese poetic culture and identity in his renowned collection of translations. This article is part of Yao's current book project, "Foreign Accents: Chinese American Verse and the Counter-Poetics of Difference in the U.S., 1910-Present." Representations is a publication of the University of California Press.
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"My grandfather's experience as a white officer in a black munitions unit in the U.S. Army during World War II was pivotal in shaping his beliefs about the importance of integration and equality," explained Julia Stahl '08 (Salem, Mass.).
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"I am often asked the following question: 'Why are you a comparative literature major if you want to go on to become a human rights activist?'" Keya Advani '08 opened her Emerson grant proposal with this statement. Subsequently awarded the grant, Advani set out this summer to explore the potential of literature as an increasingly important vehicle of protest and social change as seen in the contemporary writing of the Indian Dalit community.
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An essay titled “My Liberal Arts Education,” by Eric Kuhn ’09 is the top feature article on the home page of mediabistro.com and the third in a new series titled “J-School Confidential.” In his article, Kuhn articulates his reasons for deciding to attend a liberal arts college over a journalism school despite his goal of joining the industry upon graduation.
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Assistant Professor of Biology Wei-Jen Chang and Associate Professor of Computer Science Alistair Campbell presented at a Bioinformatics retreat held at Bates College in July. They joined colleagues from 11 other liberal colleges and discussed progress made on building bioinformatics curricula. Bioinformatics is a rising interdisciplinary field which involves the use of computer programs and computation algorithms to solve biological problems.
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Patrick Hodgens '09 and Assistant Professor of Anthropology Chaise LaDousa spent seven weeks this summer talking to students and teachers in schools and universities in Delhi and Varanasi, India, in order to understand the social lives of languages in a postcolonial society.
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Ben Noble '08, a native of LaGrange Park, Ill., is preparing to move from one hill to another. A summer intern in the office of Congressman Peter Roskam (R-Ill.), Noble spent his summer networking, absorbing political savvy, and getting the necessary experience for a potential D.C. employee.
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Chris Sullivan ’09 (Shutesbury, Mass.) has a research grant for this summer, but he won’t spend his time in a library. Sullivan, an environmental studies major, has been awarded a Levitt Fellowship to spend his summer traveling across the country on a motorcycle as he researches community-sustained agriculture in the U.S.
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Archery Capital, a fund of funds based in New York City, was also a fund for Hamilton students this summer. The office was home for three Hamiltonians: Timothy Foley '06, Xiaobo Ma '09, and Ramunas Rozgys '09 (Naujoji Akmene, Lithuania). Rozgys, whose responsibilities were fluid and varied, enjoyed the environment. "It's like a small family group," he said.
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Thanks to the generosity of Home Depot and the Community Foundation of Herkimer & Oneida Counties, Inc., the cooperation of the Utica Municipal Housing Authority and the organizational skills of Hamilton College student Jenney Stringer ’08, a community garden will be created for and by public housing resident families at Utica’s F.X. Matt Apartments, on Tuesday, Aug. 21. Volunteers are needed and invited to particpate in the initial preparation of these permanent garden beds.