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  • For six weeks this summer, Silas D. Childs Professsor of Chemistry Robin Kinnel and his research group hosted French master's candidate Aurélien Forget, who attends Université Pierre et Marie Curie. Forget explored the solution structure of a cyclic nonapeptide that is active against estrogen-mediated breast cancer as part of a larger study seeking compounds useful against this kind of cancer. This internship arose through the cooperation of the department chair and the Junior Year in France program, which was trying to create opportunities for Hamilton science students to participate in the program. Kinnel says, “The opportunity to work with Aurélien was unusual for me, and it turned out extremely well. Aurélien was able to make a significant contribution to the project.”

  • Kevin M. Brown, a 1983 graduate of Hamilton College, will join the American Red Cross as Chief Operating Officer on September 10. In this role, Brown will oversee all six lines of business, including Biomedical Services, Service to Armed Forces, Disaster Response, International Services, Chapters, and Preparedness and Health and Safety Services. He has served as the acting commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service since May 2007. Prior to that he served as the chief operating officer of the agency, chief of staff and commissioner of the IRS Small Business/Self Employed Division, one of the agency's four operating divisions.

  • Kathy Harder '08 (Auburn, Maine), Danielle Sclafani '08 (Barrington, R.I.), and Brandeis University graduate Juliana Marcus '07 (Clinton, N.Y.) are working with Professor of Psychology Greg Pierce and Associate Professor of Psychology Penny Yee to study relational aggression. Relational aggression, also known as emotional or social aggression, is a form of aggression in which someone uses lies, secrets, betrayals, gossiping, and other dishonest tactics to destroy or damage the relationships and social standing of others.

  • In November, the Corporate Council of Africa (CCA) will hold its biennial business summit in Cape Town, South Africa. The summit will be a three-day event of sessions, workshops, and networking opportunities which will focus on sectors from entertainment to agribusiness. Planning, understandably, is already well underway, and there is a Hamilton student in the midst of it. Ntokozo Xaba '08 (Seaglen Gardens, South Africa) is an intern with the CCA in Washington, D.C., this summer and spends his time working on research and background organization for the summit director, Angela Rae.

  • Visiting Professor of Communication John Adams was interviewed for an op-ed about political humor, written by columnist Patt Morrison in the Los Angeles Times (July 26, 2007).  The column, "Buy a Card, Mock a President," concerned the increasing number of greeting cards that poke fun at President Bush and Vice President Cheney.  Morrison cited an example of a birthday card where a smiling Bush is shown, with the message "What's a birthday party without a clown?" Morrison wrote: "I'd seen a few Bush greeting cards before, but they were pretty genial, joshing the chief exec for his mispronounciatin'. This was on a different magnitude. Before I got brain whiplash trying to figure this out, I called a professional big thinker. John Adams is a visiting professor of communications at Hamilton College in New York, and he's analyzed political humor. What we laugh at, he said, 'tells us just as much about who we are as an audience' as it does about the joke. Significantly, laughter 'is the surest sign of where we're coming from.'"

  • Ten students have been selected as new writing tutors for the 2007-2008 academic year: Stephanie Anglin '10, Winston Cook-Wilson '09 (music), David Foster '10, Whitney Kimmel '08 (English, French), Chris Love '10, Andrew Peart '10, Mallory Reed '10, Kevin Rowe '10, Emily Tang '08 (creative writing, Chinese), and Allison Trionfetti '10. Students must be nominated by professors to be considered for the position, and finalists are selected based on superior writing skills.

  • In a Reuters News article titled “YouTube gets candidates loosened up . . . sort of; With a new medium and format, some questions were frivolous, but the debate was traditional,” government professor Philip Klinkner shared his views on the novel CNN/YouTube Democratic presidential debate conducted this week.

  • Deanne Katz '08 started working with autistic children in high school and hasn't really stopped. This summer the rising senior has an Emerson grant to build a project around special needs services for autistic children in Massachusetts schools. Collaborating with Assistant Professor of Psychology Tara McKee, Katz is spending her summer researching the services provided to autistic children in Massachusetts public schools and how the district parents feel about these services.

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  • Summer is supposed to be time off, but for Xiaobo Ma '09 (Chengdu, China), it's math as usual. Ma explained that, as well as monitoring fund activity and attending marketing conferences, she had learned to do very advanced probability calculations as part of her work as a portfolio management intern with Archery Capital in New York City.

  • Mollusks are members of the large and diverse phylum Mullusca, which includes a variety of familiar animals like snails, clams, squid, and octopi. Scaphopods are a class of marine mollusks with a tubular and generally curved shell having openings at both ends. Since their shell resembles an elephant’s tusk, they are more commonly referred to as "tusk shells." Many scaphopod species inhabit the deep waters off the West and Alaskan coasts. This summer, Matt Sharbaugh '08 (Simsbury, Conn.), a biology major, is working with Professor of Biology Patrick Reynolds to study how the latitude and ocean depth at which scaphopods live affects their diversity and distribution.

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