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  • Hamilton Director of Web Content J.D. Ross will be one of five presenters in a session titled "Using the Web to Connect with Alumni" at the Computing Officers Association Western Region Spring Forum at Buffalo State College.

  • Greg Ray '08 presented a poster titled "Microbial Diversity in a Meromictic Lake, Green Lake (Fayetteville, NY)" at the Northeast Regional Undergraduate and Graduate Student Sigma Xi Poster Conference at Cornell University on April 19. Biology faculty Michael McCormick and Jinnie Garrett, and Allan Guiney '08 are co-authors of the poster.

  • Stuart Ingis '93 gave a talk titled "The Policy of Privacy" concerning Internet law and privacy protection on Thursday, April 24. Ingis, a partner in the law firm of Venable LLP, discussed current topics of debate around Internet policy and the possible implications that shaping Internet policy has for democracy in the near and distant future.

  • Professor of Music Samuel Pellman will present his complete set of works titled Selected Planets on Sunday, April 27, at 2 p.m. at the Kirkland Art Center in Clinton.  These pieces, for digitally synthesized instruments, will be presented with video by Lauren Koss '00.  Each planet of the solar system (including the recently demoted Pluto) is represented metaphorically by one of the works of the collection. There will be a modest admission charge. The show is not recommended for children under six.

  • Professor of History Thomas Wilson gave an invited lecture at Old College, the University of Edinburgh, on April 21. His talk was titled "The Cultic Confucius." The lecture was part of "Faces of Confucius," an international lecture series of the Confucius Institute of Scotland.

  • Hamilton College was well represented at the 15th annual Hudson River Undergraduate Mathematics Conference held on April 19 at St. Lawrence University in Canton, N.Y., with 11 students giving talks. 

  • Eugene Domack, the Joel W. Johnson Family Professor of Geosciences, has been appointed by the Central New York Regional Planning and Development Board to the Oneida Lake Watershed Advisory Council, a panel of government, NGO, scientists and local planning board members. The OLWC meets every four months to review issues related to the development, environmental impacts, funding initiatives, and other concerns involving the Oneida Lake watershed.

  • Maurice Isserman, James L. Ferguson Professor of History, has been speaking about the significance of the 1968 Columbia University student strike, led by the 1960s radical group Students for a Democratic Society. On Saturday, April 26, he will be on a panel titled "The Legacy of the Student Movement" at Columbia University, part of a three-day 40th anniversary commemorative event titled "Columbia 1968 and the World."

  • Hamilton College alumnus and Charter Trustee Stephen Sadove '73 and his wife Karin have committed $4 million to renovate the College's Emerson Literary Society building (ELS). The Sadoves' gift will enable the College to create and renew space for expanded collaboration among all student groups with the goal of making the facility a hub for student activities on campus.

  • Back-to-back state championships, a regional title and an unblemished record so far in 2007-08 are not enough to satisfy Jon Milgrom '08 and the Hamilton College Exiles.   "Our goal is to prove that we are the best team in Division III rugby," says co-captain Milgrom.  They'll have their chance. 

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