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  • Amanda Geib ’91 comes back to Hamilton each fall to recruit candidates for General Electric’s Financial Management Program. "I love Hamilton and GE and want the two to meet," said Amanda, manager of finance for GE Capital Card Services. This year she met Brendan Ferretti, whose résumé of accomplishments includes community service, working with a team of students who designed a Web site for college-age voters and serving as co-captain of the men’s basketball team.

  • As Campus Activities Board (CAB) concert coordinator, Chris Fogelstrom is the guy behind the scenes who lines up bands to perform at Hamilton. At other times he takes the stage himself, as a drummer for various campus groups.

  • How can you build a single molecule — millions of times too small for the eye to see — without ever setting foot in a chemistry lab? "It's easier than you might think," says Lorena Hernandez.

  • As thousands of people poured into Hamilton's field house anxiously waiting for former President Jimmy Carter to arrive for a campus lecture, Justin Ginsberg was there, capturing the excitement on live radio.

  • The Hamilton College Choir will hit the road during spring break, performing in concerts in seven cities in the Northeast. All performances are free and open to the public.

  • Hamilton Philosophy Professor Robert Simon was interviewed by the Los Angeles Times about political correctness in the college classroom. According to Simon, "The hesitancy to judge has created a moral paralysis among some students." He goes on to report that "as many as one-fifth of his students, while well-meaning, ultimately refuse to morally denounce the Holocaust, slavery and human sacrifice." He concludes, "I thnk sometimes students are just protecting themselves. If they come out with a politically incorrect statement, they can really get hammered."

  • The year is 2075. The United States has just established Abeona, the first self-sustaining colony on Mars. While the station initially seemed secure, all of a sudden ...

  • On the deck of the research vessel Nathaniel B. Palmer, the scientists cracked open the core sample taken from the ocean floor deep below the icy Antarctic waters. "This is it," exclaimed Hamilton Geology Professor Eugene Domack. Inside, layers of clay and silt revealed clues about climate patterns in the region 15,000 years earlier, which may be relevant to current debates about global warming.

  • Professor of English Patricia O'Neill presented a paper, "Patricia Rozema's Mansfield Park," at the 27th Annual Conference on Literature and Film, Jan. 25, 2002.

  • When Elizabeth Guancial walked into the lab on the first day of her internship at the National Institutes of Health, she was surprised to find the 14 scientists in the clinical virology section of the Institute of Allergies and Infectious Diseases gathered around a television. The group was watching one of their colleagues on "Good Morning America."

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