All News
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Assistant Professor of Physics Kate Brown was recently named to the international editorial board of the Journal of Physics Communications.
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It’s that time of year again. Cars with license plates from states across the country roam the campus searching for parking spots, and students who graduated from high school only a few months ago are rolling up with all their luggage. A class of 485 first-year students are ready to take the first step into their college experience: orientation.
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Zeng Laishun, also known as Chan Laisun, was the first Chinese student ever to enroll and study at Hamilton College.
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It’s a great internship — if you love dogs and science. “You definitely would have a hard time working with the dogs if you weren't a dog lover. The kennel houses some 50 sled dogs, and at that point the dogs will love on you whether you like it or not,” says Debbie Kim '19.
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Professor of Literature and Creative Writing Naomi Guttman read from her work at the Bright Hill Press and Literary Center of the Catskills in Treadwell, N.Y., on Aug. 9.
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The American Alliance of Museums featured a two-year, mixed-method, regional study conducted by Wellin Museum educator Amber Geary that posed the question, “What makes teachers choose to use a museum as part of their curriculum?”
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Economics major Jesse Bennett ’19 is spending his summer analyzing the effects that various policies have on the diffusion of photovoltaic cells (solar panels) in the United States. The focus of his research is to contrast the effectiveness of production subsidies versus consumption subsidies.
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Heat waves, drenching rain, slammed doors, and rants have not kept students in Professor of Government Philip Klinkner’s Electoral Politics class off the streets of the Mohawk Valley this summer.
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A new study from The Auk: Ornithological Advances tracks where American Crows go during the winter and shows that while individuals are consistent in whether they migrate or stay put, partial migration might give them enough flexibility to adapt to changing environmental conditions.
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Warmups at 8:30 a.m., rehearsals all day, and then acting classes from 7 to 9 p.m. By the time the dust has settled and Angelique Archer‘’20 is finished for the day, she’s already preparing for her next performance. It’s all part of the job for Archer, a theatre major interning at the Saratoga Shakespeare Company as an acting apprentice.
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