The Multicultural Alumni Action Group welcomed five political insiders, all Bi-Co alumni, back to campus to discuss the upcoming election and its implications.
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Mark Kleiman ’72, professor of public policy at NYU’s Marron Institute of Urban Management, and Eric Sterling ’73, executive director of the Criminal Justice Policy Foundation, were the speakers at this year’s Alumni Economics Forum.
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Politico Reporters Annie Karni ’04 and Alex Isenstadt ’07 race to cover the campaign of a lifetime.
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Walter Sorrells ’85 makes sure his products are always looking sharp—both literally and figuratively.
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Marvel comic book editor Emily Shaw ’10 shares details from her world of storytelling and character creation.
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The Chester Theater Company artistic director and playwright is an integral part of the bold Berkshires theater scene.
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Join alumni for the the panel discussion ELECTION 2016: “What’s at Stake?”... Celebrate the 50th Anniversary of the José Padín Scholarship… Alumni Awards nomination deadline is September 30...and more.
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For his thesis, the chemistry major worked on a computational problem of a lab in Montreal, where he had previously conducted a summer research internship.
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The political science major researched how bipartisan consensus on criminal justice reform changed from the 1994 Crime Bill to the 2010 Fair Sentencing Act.
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The computer science major studied how machine learning models work by using a novel approach to determine which features of a data set are the most useful to the model.
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The anthropology major, who minored in health studies and earned a concentration in Africana studies, researched Nigeria’s healthcare system and HIV programs for her senior thesis.
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The biology majors collaborated on related senior thesis projects on the role of fruit fly genes in mosquito embryo development.
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The economics major studied how Foreign Direct Investment inflows and privatization of enterprises in China affect the country’s innovation across industry sectors.
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The sociology major and Chinese minor used her thesis on Asian American educational experiences to explore the intersection of her interests.
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The computer science and chemistry double major continued work begun in the Dark Reactions Project, detailed in a recent cover story in Nature, for an interdisciplinary thesis.