This special bicentennial issue of the Hamilton Alumni Review puts aside the magazine’s regular format of features and departments in order to document 200 days on (and occasionally off) the Hill. Stories were contributed by student writers assisted by alumni mentors. Student photographers also played a major part in creating the issue. Together, their work links Hamilton past and present.
The College embarks on a campaign to support its new need-blind admission policy, build new arts and theatre facilities and strengthen the Annual Fund. Why these, and why now? Campaign Chair Jeff Little ’71 explains the priorities and the mission behind them. More ...
Those who have followed distance runner Peter Kosgei ’11 through his nine national titles may equate that graceful stride with easy victories. They’d be wrong. In competition and in class, Kosgei is all about pushing himself to the limit. More ...
The library is always a work in progress, and never more so than in the digital era. But the obituaries for paper and ink are premature, librarians say; the point isn’t the technology, it’s the information and how to access it best. More ...
Prohibition and the automobile made for an interesting mix in the 1920s; a generation earlier, good friends Elihu Root, Class of 1864, and Andrew Carnegie transformed the Hamilton campus in a more sober fashion. More …
Ambassador-turned-professor Edward S. “Ned” Walker ’62 argues that the WikiLeaks uproar did little damage to U.S. interests or image — because the leaks showed our diplomats doing their jobs well. More ...
