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Evan Reed’s ’26 philosophy is “Saying yes to as many things that I have an interest in and stumbling into something else.”

Reed’s can-do approach has landed him summer internships with the Sapere Aude Consortium, AMG Funds, and First Citizens Bank; spurred participation in three semesters of cohort-based experiential learning; and balanced seeking out challenges with cherishing the familiar.

Evan's Journey

First Year

  • Fall 2022

    Refining Interests

    Reed intended to be a mathematics major, but teammates on the varsity football team encourage him to consider economics. He was unfamiliar with investment banking, but he became fascinated with understanding government decisions and policy implications. “I have to do this,” he thought.

  • Winter 2023

    Learning to Lead

    Reed applied to the Levitt Leadership Institute (LLI). The program instilled in him that “leading from behind” and leading from the front are equally important to the longevity of transformative social action. Professor Margo Okazawa-Rey invited him to return as a teaching assistant.

Sophomore Year

  • Spring 2024

    A Tale of Two Hills

    Reed moved to the nation’s capital for the Hamilton Program in Washington, D.C. He believed the financial sector was his end-goal, but interning at William & Jensen under mentor George Baker ’74 shifted his focus to the energy industry. “I was exposed to a different lens of financial services,” he explained. “It felt like a lot at first, but by the end, I really enjoyed it.”

Junior Year

  • Spring 2025

    Slowing Down

    Studying abroad in Seville, Spain, offered Reed a respite from fast-paced life on Capitol Hill—and College Hill. Reed made good on his goal to travel as much as possible; he visited Monaco, Malta, Egypt, Italy, and Morocco, to name just a few sites.

  • Summer 2025

    Speeding Back Up

    A summer of shadowing deals, researching energy markets and policy around the country, contributing to analysts’ due diligence efforts, and practicing Excel (a lot) as an intern on the First Citizens Bank Energy Project Finance team solidified Reed’s background in finance.

Senior Year

  • Fall 2025

    Football Winds Down

    The last season of football was underway. Reed didn’t deny that the sport requires hard work, but he approached every practice with a positive attitude and strived to be a role model. Slacking off, he says, “[only] sets a bad precedent for others who want to do what I did.”

  • Fall 2025

    Determining a Focus

    Reed enrolled in the Justice Lab to pursue “Just Energy Transitions: Local and Global.” He reconnected with mentors while meeting new peers “interested in making the world a different place with a desire to do it in many different ways.” Both classmates and advisors pushed him to apply his assignments to the outside world. Reed began submitting op-eds to news outlets.

  • Winter 2026

    Revisiting Projects

    As a TA, Reed designed programming for fellow students through the LLI—and kept saying “yes” to self-learning. He facilitated icebreakers, discussions, and team-building exercises for peers. Reed reflected, “I got to observe people go through the same things I did, and help prompt them to consider new ideas and embrace things that aren’t necessarily comfortable about yourself.”

The Future

Reed will step into a position in renewable energy project finance at First Citizens Bank in NYC, which Cross and Natalia Peters-Domenech ’24 helped him secure. His attention is on building his business acumen, though exploring national parks will fill his spare time.

Class of 2026 Stories

Alinur Jaboldinov ’26

Alinur Jaboldinov ’26: Giving Many Dreams a Try

Between conducting research at multiple labs both at Hamilton and off campus, shooting photography for the Hamilton College digital media team, and coordinating educational opportunities for underrepresented students in Kazakhstan, Alinur Jaboldinov ’26 rarely takes a break.

Norma Callejas ’26

Callejas ’26 Combines Disciplines Enroute to BU’s Ethnomusicology Program

By taking advantage of Hamilton’s interdisciplinary studies program, Norma Callejas ’26 has carved out a space that blurs linguistic, cultural, and academic lines among three disciplines — Hispanic studies, Japanese, and music. With support from her professors, study abroad programs, and extracurriculars, Callejas has discovered and nurtured a love for ethnomusicology, the study of the cultural aspects behind music. She’ll soon be heading to Boston University for a master’s degree in the subject.

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