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  • Assistant Professor of Government Sharon Werning Rivera published “Unikal’nyi put’ Rossii? Obzor politicheskikh elit” [“A Unique Path for Russia? A Survey of Political Elites”], in A. D. Shutov, Uchenye zapiski 2006 (Moscow: Nauchnaya kniga, 2006), which is a publication of the Diplomatic Academy of the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. In it, she presents data from an original survey of Russian elites to show that despite the public rhetoric about Russia’s uniqueness, a substantial number of Russian leaders are willing to borrow from foreign experience, particularly from models of European welfare capitalism.

  • Eric Kuhn '09 interviewed CNBC’s “Mad Money” host Jim Cramer on the set of Cramer's “College Tour” at the University of Southern California (USC) this month. Kuhn’s interview will air on the season premiere of “TAKE 5,” USC’s premier entertainment show, on Friday, Sept. 21, at 8 p.m. EDT and 11 p.m. EDT on USC's television station “Trojan Vision.” The show will also be streamed online at www.trojanvision.com, on Los Angeles public access Channel 36, the Open Student Television Network and UWire.

  • This fall, a group of five Hamilton Students will begin their work as the second group of Bonner Leaders at Hamilton College. Bonner Leaders is a program of the Bonner Foundation, committed to "intentional opportunities for students to develop as thoughtful, engaged citizens of our national and global community." The five Hamilton sophomores include Robyn Gibson, Kidecia King, Mariam Ballout, Stephanie Tafur and Leide Cabral. Each student was placed with a different community organization where they will engage in individual projects that promote the objectives of the Bonner Foundation.

  • Maurice Isserman, James L. Ferguson Professor of History, was interviewed for a Minnesota Public Radio look back at the “Summer of Love,” the summer of 1967. “Midmorning” host Kerri Miller spoke with both Isserman and San Francisco Chronicle music critic Joel Selvin about the music, protests, social upheaval, the influence of earlier events in the ’50s and ’60s and the fusion of black and white culture during that summer.

  • Mathematics professors Dick Bedient and Sally Cockburn presented a talk titled “The Hamilton College Senior Seminar” at the summer meetings of the Mathematical Association of America in San Jose. The talk was part of a session called “Getting Students to Discuss and Write about Mathematics.” They described the department’s senior seminar program where the goals are to provide students with an opportunity to work on problems of interest, present work orally, learn about the writing of mathematics and learn some mathematics. The experiment has proved remarkably successful. The department is now averaging about 40 concentrators per year. In an evaluation of the seminar experience one student commented "It was the most thought provoking class I've ever taken."

  • The Hamilton College Climate Change and Environment Issues Youth Poll, conducted by Assistant Professor of Economics Julio Videras and his class with Zogby International, was cited in a PBS Online NewsHour piece about global warming. Hamilton graduate Tucker Hutchinson '07, a member of Videras' class that worked on the poll, was also interviewed. The poll of 900 students, conducted in late 2006, found that most American high school students don't understand the issue of climate change. The PBS story, "Young Entrepreneurs Target Global Warming," noted: "In terms of knowledge and understanding of the issue, a 2007 Hamilton College poll found that in general, American high school students lack a grasp of climate change basics.

  • This past summer, scores of Hamilton College students pushed their mental boundaries by shelving their role as students and becoming student researchers. Dan Chandler ’08 (Orange, Conn.) was one of these intrepid students, but what makes his story particularly interesting is that rather than carrying out his research in the friendly confines of the Hamilton College Science Center, Chandler chose yet another challenge and conducted research at Yale University. Chandler, a neuroscience major, says he was immediately interested in studying the effects of repeated low blood sugar on the behavior of rats.

  • Assistant Professor of Government Sharon Werning Rivera chaired a panel titled “Political Elites, Hybrid Regimes, and Democratization” at the 2007 annual meeting of the American Political Science Association in Chicago from August 30 to September 2. She also presented a paper titled “Structure versus Agency in the Postcommunist Transitions: Quantifying the Impact of Leadership,” which she co-authored with David W. Rivera, Hamilton government department lecturer.

  • Susan Mason, director of the Oral Communication Center and director of the Education Studies Program, has recently developed two education programs for the American Management Association International: "Developing Emotional Intelligence" and "Women in Business." The American Management Association is a not-for-profit, educational institution recognized by the Regents of the University of the State of New York. Mason’s work will be disseminated through the AMA worldwide network in the United States, Canada, Mexico, and Europe and in Japan, China, Southeast Asia and the Middle East.

  • Tim Minella ’09 (Kennett Square, Pa.) studied loop quantum gravity (LQG) this summer under the advisement of Associate Professor of Physics Seth Major. According to LQG, which attempts to reconcile the seemingly incompatible theories of quantum mechanics and general relativity, the basic structure of space turns out to be made up of small discrete units of volume. This means that space cannot exist in any smaller quantity than these quantized volumes, which are as small compared to a proton (one of the subatomic particles that make up atoms) as a proton is to us. Physicists represent these fundamental units of space as a network of interconnected loops, hence the name of the theory. 

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