All News
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Douglas Ambrose, the Sidney Wertimer Associate Professor of History, and Associate Professor of Government Robert Martin, editors of The Many Faces of Alexander Hamilton, will discuss their research at an event hosted by the NYU Press and New York Historical Society on Tuesday, Sept. 26 at the NY Historical Society in New York City. Ambrose and Martin will be joined by noted Hamilton historian Richard Brookhiser to discuss Hamilton's legacy and consider why history has denied him the central place he occupied in his own time. Contact the Office of Alumni Relations for information about ticket information, regional@hamilton.edu, (866) 729-0314.
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Professor of Religious Studies Richard Seager was interviewed for a Buffalo News article, "Buddhism takes the Spotlight," concerning the Dalai Lama's visit this week to Western New York. Seager was quoted as saying: "In the United States, it's quite common for Buddhism to mesh with other traditions, particularly Christianity and Judaism." Seager said "Catholic priests... have been known to dabble in Buddhist practices to improve their contemplative lives, using 'techniques of Buddhism wedded to a theistic approach.'" In addition Seager said, "A large number of highly trained Buddhist teachers in the United States come from a Jewish background." He is the author of Buddhism in America (Columbia, 1999), an examination of prominent communities and leading figures in a range of Buddhist traditions currently setting down roots in this country. Seager's latest book, Encountering the Dharma (University of California Press, March, 2006) offers a rare insider's look at Soka Gakkai Buddhism, one of Japan's most influential and controversial religious movements, and one that is experiencing explosive growth around the world.
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Leide Cabral '10 contributed a chapter to a new book New Directions for Youth Development: The Case for Twenty-First Century Learning (Jossey-Bass). Cabral wrote about her experiences in the Citizen School program in Boston, which is headed by John Werner '92. Citizen Schools is an after-school program that focuses on hands-on learning apprenticeships and homework help. Cabral, who came to the U.S. from Cape Verde when she was four, wrote: "Before I was able to develop and expand my confidence, thinking and ability at Citizen Schools, I was an underachieving student with unrealized potential -- a common problem plaguing students, schools and families across America." Cabral went on to graduate from Boston Latin School and received a Posse Scholarship to Hamilton.
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On Sunday, Sept. 24, at 2 p.m., The Sterile Cuckoo, filmed on and around the Hamilton campus in the late 1960s and co-written by a Hamilton alumnus, will be screened in Kirner-Johnson Auditorium. The event is part of the F.I.L.M. (Forum for Images and Languages in Motion) series organized by Scott MacDonald, visiting professor in art history.
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Jason Haas '07 was interviewed for articles in two issues of Advocate, a lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) news magazine. In the March 28 issue Haas was featured in a piece titled "Future Gay Hero," in which he was recognized as a 2005 honoree for "Youth Who Make a Difference, Boston Pride." In the June 20 issue Haas's work in organizing the LGBTQ Empowerment and Action Project at Hamilton was noted. Haas said the Project "worked on LGBT recruiting, on identifying LGBT-friendly employers and making a database in the Career Center."
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While many of her peers stayed on campus over the summer to pursue research in the sciences, Matroner George ’07 (Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania) traveled to South Africa to work in a research lab with Professor Kelly Chibale at the University of Capetown.
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Eric Kuhn ‘09 will interview NBC News correspondent and Hamilton alumna Lisa Daniels ’94 and national pollster and Utica resident John Zogby on the college’s radio station WHCL 88.7 FM on Monday, Sept. 18, at 4 p.m. The show, Kuhn and Company can also be heard at www.whcl.org. Kuhn is soliciting questions from his audience for Daniels and Zogby. He asks that all questions be sent to him at ekuhn@hamilton.edu.
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Theo Gakwaya, former minister of interior in post-genocide Rwanda, will give a lecture titled “The Rwanda Genocide: Before, During, and After,” on Monday, September 18, at 4:15 p.m. in the Science Auditorium. It is free and open to the public.
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Professor of Religious Studies Richard Seager was interviewed by the Christian Science Monitor (9/14/06) for an article about Buddhism in the U.S., related to the Dalai Lama's visit this week to North America. Seager, author of Buddhism in America, estimates there are 1.5 million Buddhists in the U.S, and says it is the fourth-largest religion here. The Dalai Lama will visit Vancouver, B.C., then several U.S. cities during his North American tour.
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Associate Professor of Biology Herm Lehman has published a manuscript titled, “Division of labor in the honey bee (Apis mellifera): the role of tyramine beta-hydroxlyase” in the Journal of Experimental Biology. Lehman’s laboratory explores the neurochemical basis of behavior and in this paper he describes a link between the foraging behavior of honey bees, the level of a common neurotransmitter, and the amount of messenger RNA that encodes the enzyme necessary for the synthesis of the neurotransmitter. These findings are new and interesting because they support the notion that subtle changes in the expression of a gene involved in neurotransmitter synthesis can have a profound impact on animal behavior.