Course Registration for Fall 2025 Term
Friday, April 11, 2025 All day
Description
April 7-11. Please see the course registration web page for schedule.
More from Academics
- Apr 1112:15 PMSustainability and AI: Innovation at What Cost?Academics | ALANA Cultural Center, MPR
As sustainability and AI become increasingly important forces that shape our future, it is more important now than ever to explore their relationship. Join us for a faculty panel with professors in geology, economics, computer science, and philosophy to unpack the tradeoffs between sustainability and AI and how they can both help and hinder each other.Panelists:Rick Klotz - Associate Professor of Economics Toby Svoboda - Visiting Assistant Professor of PhilosophyNicholas Diana - Assistant Professor of Computer ScienceThis panel is hosted by students in the Sustainability Representatives (S-Reps) Program, a leadership development program for first-year and transfer students passionate about sustainability. The S-Reps Program is student-run by paid Sustainability Interns who mentor the incoming students, build community, and encourage sustainability skill-building. This event is cosponsored by the Environmental Studies Program and the Computer Science Department.Hot wraps by Hamilton Whole Foods will be provided and will include gluten-free, vegan, and nut-free options. Please bring your own reusable water bottle.This Environmental Studies Brown Bag is part of the Office of Sustainability’s 13 Days of Green series leading up to Earth Day. - Apr 112:00 PMColgate-Hamilton Economics Seminar Series-Ernest LaiAcademics | Persson Hall, 209
Ernest Lai of Lehigh University will lecture as part of the Colgate University-Hamilton College Economics Seminar Series. - Apr 113:30 PMWOLK Lecture - A New Epigenetic Fix for Brain CancerAcademics | Ho Science Center, 101
Join us for the WOLK Lecture - "A New Epigenetic Fix for Brain Cancer" - presented by Alea Mills, professor at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory.Scientific exploration shapes our lives and impacts the world in a multitude of ways, and Mills is fortunate to lead a highly talented team of international scientists that are driven to make cutting edge discoveries that benefit mankind.In this seminar, Mills will tell you about the journey, and discuss some of their successes, in particular on a cancer known as glioblastoma, the most common type of cancer that starts in the brain. Only about five out of 100 people with glioblastoma are alive five years after they get the news from their doctors; half of these patients live for just around a year. This team discovered a new target that, when depleted, could prolong survival in nearly three quarters of these deadly cancer cases. The group shows that glioblastoma’s malicious nature is due to a protein that goes rogue and repackages our chromosomes to ‘epigenetically’ wipe out our natural ability to prevent cancer. The good news is that we can trigger a switch to revive our cancer-preventing power, thereby shutting down glioblastoma.Mills will also discuss current efforts to advance these findings, which offer promise for future success stories of longer, healthier lives for people with this devastating brain cancer.Co-sponsored by the Michael J. Wolk Heart Foundation. Reception to follow in Cunniff Commons Atrium - Apr 114:00 PM22nd Annual Japanese Speech ContestAcademics | Lawrence Hall, 105
Attend the 22nd Annual Japanese Speech Contest.All are welcome. - Apr 116:30 PMThe Arctic: Our Last Great WildernessAcademics | Ho Tung Visualization Lab, 401 Ho Science Center
Vast. Wild. Magical. The Arctic is not just one of the planet’s greatest natural spectacles, it’s a place with global ecological importance that has supported Indigenous communities and diverse ecosystems for generations.Narrated by Indigenous film producer Princess Daazhraii Johnson (Neet'saii Gwich'in) with National Geographic photographer Florian Schulz, The Arctic: Our Last Great Wilderness roams the 19.6 million acres of what is currently known as the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.Follow the elusive 200,000-strong Porcupine caribou herd as it migrates to the Arctic Coastal Plain, one of the longest animal migrations on Earth. Meet the polar bears, musk oxen, wolves, golden eagles, and people who call this area home. Experience the adventure of The Arctic, and learn why this remarkable land deserves our protection. - Apr 117:00 PMSenior Theater Project: Ni Una Bomba MásAcademics | Ryan Studio, 212
Ni Una Bomba Más Written and directed by Jorge Rochet ‘25 Performed by Colgate students and community membersNi Una Bomba Más brings to life three intertwined stories based on real events from Vieques, Puerto Rico, during the U.S. Navy’s occupation. Through defiance, loss, and resilience, the play reveals the deep scars of colonialism and environmental devastation, offering an intense and raw perspective on this lost piece of Puerto Rican and American history.Limited seating. Registration through Eventbrite is strongly encouraged.