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  • Edward S. Walker, Jr. '62, former U. S. Ambassador to Israel, Egypt and the United Arab Emirates and the Christian A. Johnson Distinguished Professor of Global Political Theory, was interviewed by a number of media outlets during the month of June.

  • Unrestricted gifts to Hamilton College directly support students and move Hamilton forward while honoring its past. Our generosity repays gifts we received from those who came before us. Giving to Hamilton affirms a shared belief that education is key to securing a better future for our world and says to the vibrant and diverse student body that, "I give because I believe that one student, educated in the Hamilton tradition, can positively affect the lives of thousands." Please give to the Annual Fund. The means to do so follow.

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  • Artwork by Assistant Professor of Art Rebecca Murtaugh is featured in the June 28, 2007, edition of The New York Times. The artwork, titled "To Mark A Significant Space in the Living Room #1," appears on the front page of the House and Home section. The article is titled "While You Were Out, The Post-it Went Home" and is authored by Penelope Green.

  • Hamilton's Director of Outdoor Leadership Andrew Jillings finished first in the single male kayak division and sixth overall in the 2007 Yukon River Quest, the world's longest annual canoe and kayak race. Based on results posted on the official race Web site last updated today at 3:45 EDT on Saturday, June 30, Jillings reached Dawson City behind one tandem kayak and four voyageur canoes, each with six to eight rowers. He had never participated in a kayak race before clinching the single male kayak title.

  • Associate Professor of Theatre Craig Latrell delivered a paper in Bangkok at a conference titled "Cartographies of Culture, Religion and Thought." The conference focused on place and place-making in contemporary Asia -- the distribution of communities, cultures, religions and manners of thought. Latrell's paper, titled "Performance and Place-making at Sarawak Cultural Village," centered on the remapping of Sarawak's cultural identity and the role of performance in that remapping.  The conference, held at Assumption University, was also coordinated by La Trobe University in Melbourne and Ateneo De Manila University, Philippines.

  • A soldier in today’s armed forces is a human being called to a field containing scenes of utter inhumanity. In the course of defending family and homeland, a soldier will often be forced to see and do terrible things. As General Douglas MacArthur said, “A soldier must cease to be a man in battle.” Unfortunately, the means of comforting these individuals when they return to society have not kept up with the means of destruction they operate. Still today we are confronted with the trouble of what to do when the enemies we endeavor to destroy cease to be physical and move inside the mind. Through their summer research at Hamilton, Jen Sadowsky ’08 (Allendale, N.J.) and Abby Crimmins ’09 (Elmira, N.Y.) are part of the effort to rebuild the minds of those who have received severe psychological shocks.

  • At first glance, one might be jealous of the summer plans of Emily Smith ’09 (Ridgefield, Conn.): she is researching celebrities. But it’s not actually autograph-chasing in Hollywood; instead, the world politics major and art history minor student has a Levitt Center Fellowship to study the role of the Western celebrity as a social entrepreneur, with an emphasis on those celebrities active in the HIV/AIDS crisis in Africa.

  • Nguyen T.T. Nguyen '08 and Professor of Physics Ann Silversmith presented a poster at the 16th International Conference on Dynamical Processes in Excited States of Solids, held June 17-22 in Segovia, Spain. Their poster was titled "Rare-Earth Ion Distribution in Sol-Gel Glasses Co-Doped With Al3+."

  • Associate Professor of Music Lydia Hamessley presented a paper titled “From Beijing to Appalachia: Abigail Washburn’s Song of the Traveling Daughter” at the 9th biennial Feminist Theory and Music conference, held at McGill University in Montreal on June 6-10. Washburn is an old-time banjo player who blends Appalachian style music with Mandarin lyrics (which she writes) and eastern musical elements. This paper explores how this fusion of styles works, why she is interested in creating this musical synthesis, and finally how her music (in particular the banjo) is emblematic of her larger struggle to reconcile her American identity with her desire to find a place within Chinese culture.

  • Summer is always a busy time for physical plant employees and this summer is no exception. From major renovation projects to minor changes, many campus facilities will be modified or updated by employees and outside contractors.

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