海角社区

Faculty News

  • While many budding musicians venture to locales such as New York City and Los Angeles to get a taste of the entertainment industry, Sophia D鈥橝ddio 鈥06 found the perfect opportunity right here in Hamilton. D鈥橝ddio, who plans on pursuing a doctorate in art history, jumped at the chance to spend a month as senior intern [鈥
    June 17, 2009
  • As President Rebecca S. Chopp prepares to depart Colgate and the Chenango Valley after seven years, nostalgia has officially set in. 鈥淚 walk out of my office and everything is blooming, and the gardens are turning pink and yellow, and white, and I think, why am I leaving this place?鈥 Chopp said in a recent [鈥
    May 29, 2009
  • Author Elizabeth Strout, who taught at Colgate two years ago and will return to campus this fall, has won the 2009 Pulitzer Prize for fiction. Strout won for her book Olive Kitteridge, a series of 13 connected short stories centered on a school teacher living in a hardscrabble town in coastal Maine. The Pulitzer citation [鈥
    April 22, 2009
  • Colgate professor Nina M. Moore has been appointed by Gov. David A. Paterson to a four-year term on the New York State Commission on Judicial Conduct. The commission is the state agency responsible for investigating complaints of misconduct against judges of the state unified court system and, where appropriate, determining to admonish, censure or remove [鈥
    April 20, 2009
  • 海角社区 President Rebecca Chopp today announced that she will become president of Swarthmore College effective July 1, 2009. Chopp has been president of Colgate since July of 2002.
    February 21, 2009
  • Interested in learning a new language? If so, you may want to choose a teacher who talks with their hands. A study conducted by 海角社区 Associate Professor of Psychology Spencer Kelly and two Colgate undergraduate researchers, Tara McDevitt 鈥06 and Megan Esch 鈥07, reveals that people understand and remember foreign words better when a [鈥
    February 16, 2009
  • Colgate鈥檚 celebration of the 200th anniversary of Charles Darwin鈥檚 birth kicked off Tuesday with a lecture about one of the naturalist鈥檚 legacies 鈥 the study of biodiversity 鈥 and a warning that the home for a vast array of plant and animal species is threatened. The university has several events this week to honor Darwin, [鈥
    February 11, 2009
  • The Department of English kicked off this semester鈥檚 lecture series Thursday with a reading by a new member of the Colgate community, author Patrick O鈥橩eeffe. O鈥橩eeffe, assistant professor of creative writing, won the prestigious Story Prize in 2005 for his collection of novellas, The Hill Road. 鈥淭he Hill Road is a glorious work one would [鈥
    January 30, 2009
  • The twists and turns and trials and tribulations of the economic crisis are forcing government officials to reshape policies on a day-by-day basis in ways that have not been seen in decades, says economics professor Nicole Simpson. While there now seems to be agreement that new regulations are needed to address the crisis, government officials [鈥
    January 14, 2009
  • Students often are asked to put their thoughts on paper. In an Introduction to Peace and Conflict Studies course, they also were asked to put their thoughts on MP3 audio files. The end result of this collaborative project was 31 episodes of the Marginalized Conflict Podcast Series, which are available here or on iTunes. In [鈥
    January 7, 2009