91B0FBB4-04A9-D5D7-16F0F3976AA697ED
9D9EFF11-C715-B4AD-C419B3380BA70DA7
  • Members of the Hamilton community gathered on Dec. 4 for what is hoped will become an annual tradition – Lighting of Our Village – outside Sadove Student Center. The event focused on what light means to different people and different cultures.

  • “Convergence and Competition Among the New Turkish Middle Classes,” co-authored by Professor of Economics Erol Balkan appears in the December issue of Current History.

    Topic
  • What does business have to do with the arts? Kate Spencer K’79 learned about this the hard way when she walked in on two professors competing in a critique of her art. “It didn’t even have anything to do with me,” she said. “It was just two professors debating, but I had to watch my pride deflate right in front of them. I learned that day that my ego was something that I had to manage if I really wanted to make a living as an artist.”

  • For the Japanese department, the close of each semester means the bi-annual Red Pit party-- an evening of communal celebration among students and faculty. Upperclassmen present videos, projects, and skits they have worked on throughout the semester, granting students beginning their studies of the language a glimpse into their future tasks. And, of course, the night is paired with delicious food-- which even draws in attendees outside of the department.

    Topic
  • “An engaging account of the rise, fall, resurrection and legacy of the Weavers, the Greenwich Village-based quartet of left-leaning musicians founded near the end of 1948,” was how Maurice Isserman, the Publius Virgilius Rogers Professor of American History, described Wasn’t That a Time: The Weavers, the Blacklist, and the Battle for the Soul of America in The New York Times Sunday Book Review section.

    Topic
  • Assistant Professor of Classics Jesse Weiner recently presented “Promethean Possibilities and Punishments in Dan Simmons’ Hyperion” at two conferences.

    Topic
  • The Because Hamilton campaign video highlights the incredible work that David Shaye '02, Gretchen Morrison Grad '85, and Arthur Williams '16 are doing to build a better world, to empower communities, and to improve health and foster peace.

    Topic
  • The 1812 Leadership Circle dinner was the setting for the formal kickoff of the $400 million Because Hamilton campaign, the most ambitious initiative in the College's history.

    Topic
  • DJ D-Sol (a.k.a. David Solomon ’84, P’16) hit the decks and dropped the beat for Hamilton at New York City's Up & Down as part of the Because Hamilton kick-off.

    Topic

Help us provide an accessible education, offer innovative resources and programs, and foster intellectual exploration.

Site Search