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Campus Faiths More Diverse: Inter-Religious Services Planned

Posted on Nov 6, 1998

Just a few years ago, it was uncommon to see a
student on campus dressed in traditional Muslim garb, says Viki Brooks-McDonald,
Protestant chaplain.

Today, however, the sight serves as a reminder of what
Brooks-McDonald calls the “changing landscape of faiths” at Union and other
college campuses. “Faith traditions on campus are becoming as diverse as any other
aspect of culture,” she says. “We need to be aware of what people of various
faiths bring to campus.”

So, Brooks-McDonald and a committee from the campus
community have begun to explore the possibility of celebrating an “inter-religious
service” that will include elements of a number of faith traditions. “Our hope
is to increasingly uphold spiritual aspects of who we are as individuals,”
Brooks-McDonald says.

“This is a very difficult path to walk,” she
acknowledges. “There is a difference between tolerance — where you pat somebody
on the head and tell them it's OK to be different – and pluralism — which
is truly understanding and respecting what is involved with the faith and practice of
another.”

Brooks-McDonald and other members of the campus committee
recently attended a conference titled “Education as Transformation: Religious
Pluralism, Spirituality and Higher Education” at Wellesley College, where they
learned that a growing challenge on nearly all campuses is that more students, faculty and
staff are not from Judeo-Christian faiths. Or, if they are, they have little knowledge of
other faiths.

“I have a congregational background,” says
Brooks-McDonald, citing herself as an example. “So I'm not all that familiar
with eastern religions.”

Brooks-McDonald, who joined the College this fall, is an
ordained Presbyterian pastor. She earned her masters in divinity from McCormick Seminary
in Chicago, and her bachelor's degree from the College of Wooster. She has served in
the congregational ministry for 13 years, specializing in pastoral care and the nurture of
an integrated faith.

For information or to join the committee to develop an
inter-religious service, call ext. 6618.

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Calendar of Events

Posted on Nov 6, 1998

Friday, Nov. 6, 12:20 p.m.
Humanities 019.
Committee on Teaching on “How are you motivating your students: fear of failure or
love of knowledge?”

Friday, Nov. 6, through Monday, Nov. 9 – 8
and 10 p.m.

Reamer Auditorium.
Lethal Weapon 4 presented by Film Committee.

Through Saturday, Nov. 7, 8 p.m.
Metamorphosis by Steven Berkoff, directed by Prof. William A. Finlay. For
information, call ext. 6545.

Saturday, Nov. 7, 8 p.m.
Memorial Chapel.
Union College Orchestra performs works by Beethoven, Dvorak, Olsen and Ellington.

Monday, Nov. 9, 7 p.m.
Performing Arts Studio.
Union College Choir performs “Romanticism from Beethoven to Gershwin.” Reception
to follow.

Friday, Nov. 13, and Saturday, Nov. 14, 8:02 p.m.
Yulman Theater.
Proctor's Too opens its three-performance season with “Integrity Brings An Empty
Plate,” a series of movement essays written and performed by Michael A. Carson. For
information, call ext. 6545.

Through Nov. 27.
Arts Center Atrium.
Exhibit of “Recent Sculpture: Indoors and Out” by Jonathan Kirk.

Through Dec. 20.
Mandeville Gallery, Nott Memorial.
“Martin Benjamin: Photographs 1970 to 1998.”

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Union-Schenectady Plan Discussed; Meetings Set

Posted on Nov 6, 1998

A week after the College announced
the Union-Schenectady (US) Initiative, a broad-based plan to revitalize the neighborhood
west of campus, meetings have been held or scheduled for members of the local and campus
communities.

On Monday, College employees discussed the plan in some
detail with College administrators. Plans are to have information on the program at the
Employee Benefits Fair on Nov. 19.

A community meeting has been scheduled for Thursday, Nov.
12, at 7 p.m. in St. Anthony's Church Hall, 331 Seward Place. Refreshments will be
served. There will also be children's activities during the meeting.

The US Initiative includes a number of incentives for both
homeowners and College employees, including scholarships, special mortgage programs,
community outreach programs, the establishment of a neighborhood association, and the
relocation of Union's safety office to provide a secure presence in the neighborhood.

Key elements include:

— Scholarships covering the full cost of tuition for
eligible homeowners

— College acquisition of a number of properties to be
renovated and used for student housing and faculty residences

— Mortgage incentives for College employees

— A College-run community outreach program

“I am convinced that the outcome of these efforts
will truly result in a win-win for Union and Schenectady. Our interests are inextricably
linked – when Union benefits so does the City, and when the City benefits so does
Union,” President Roger Hull said at the announcement. “This initiative comes at
a time when the competition among quality liberal arts colleges has never been greater. If
we fail to act and ignore the issues around us, we are ultimately hurting our – and the
City's – future.”

For more information on the US Initiative, call Gretchel
Tyson, director of community outreach, at ext. 6609.

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The Union Bookshelf

Posted on Nov 1, 1998

The Union
Bookshelf regularly features new books written by alumni
authors and other members of the Union community. If
you're an author and would like to be included in an
upcoming issue, please send a copy of the book as well as
your publisher's news release to the Office of
Communications, Union College, Schenectady, N.Y.
12308-3169.

 

Orel Friedman
'35, M.D.

Eighteen By Thirteen is a murder
mystery that includes blackmail, love, betrayal, and a
close look into the world of crime. What makes the book
particularly interesting — and a little scary — is that
it is the collaborative effort of thirteen members of a
writer's workshop, ten of whom are in their eighties and
three in their seventies.

The authors met every Saturday morning
for three years, clustered around a long table in the
arts-and-crafts room of the Forum Retirement Community in
Deerfield Beach, Fla. They say that the book that
resulted from those meetings bears part of each of them.

Friedman, who is a retired physician
from Glens Falls, N.Y., was one of the members of the
workshop. The group has pledged a percentage of each sale
to a local the Alzheimer's Family Center. The book was
published by Rutledge Press.

 

Frank Alois '40

Rhymes and Reflections, written by
Frank and his wife, Greta, starts with poetry that was
written earlier in their life, followed by a section of
short stories, and finally, another section of poetry
written in later years, most of which reflects on nature
themes. In “Of Rabbits and Vegetables” —
“Of great value is a clover to each and every bunny,
to him a clover anytime is absolutely yummy!” From
another poem, “The Fog and My Loneliness” —
“My loneliness too is a wave that can be dreary like
mist, a cloud soft but cold, pierced by a sea-gull, its
wings rimmed with gold. A bell in the distance, the sound
of trees, the fog and my loneliness are shared by these.
Now is silence all around me, no matter where it ends,
the fog and my loneliness — these are my friends.”

The small, hardcover volume is
available from the authors, who live at The Cedars, Box
3, West River, Md. 20778. At the time of this writing,
Frank was hard at work on his first novel.

 

John Lewis '41

John Lewis, retired professor of
economics and international affairs at Princeton
University, has co-written The World Bank — Its First
Half Century. Lewis, working in with Richard Webb of
Peru, former governor of Peru's central bank, and Devesh
Kapur of India, assistant professor at Harvard, has
produced a two-volume set. The first is a history of the
World Bank, written by the authors, and the second is a
collection of perspectives on the bank, edited by the
authors.

Lewis, who retired from Princeton in
1991, was a member of the Kennedy-Johnson Council of
Economic Advisers, director of the USAID mission to
India, dean of Princeton's Woodrow Wilson School of
Public and International Affairs, and resident chairman
of OECD's Development Assistance Committee in Paris. The
books are available through Brookings Press.

 

Bill Maynard
'50

Bill Maynard's first novel, Rock River,
is an action-packed adventure for 8-12 year olds. It is
the story of Luke, who has questions about his own
bravery after his brother dies in a daredevil stunt. His
brother's death changes things at home; his parents don't
get along, and they constantly warn Luke about not taking
chances with the river, since it looks calm on the
surface but can be very dangerous underneath. It's not
until he takes a dangerous river trip with his friend,
Milo, who challenges Luke to take unnecessary risks, that
he discovers the true meaning of courage.

Maynard's previous books, Incredible
Ned and Santa's Time Off, were featured in “The
Union Bookshelf” in September 1997. The author lives
in Westchester County, N.Y., and on Martha's Vineyard.
The book is available through the publisher, The Putnam
& Grosset Group.

 

Kate White '72

What do you dream about having — a
perfect partner, the house of your dreams, a big
promotion? Kate White tells us that getting what you want
is possible and is a learned skill. Using anecdotes from
successful women, she gives us nine rules that are,
surprisingly, just the opposite of what “good”
girls are taught. The chapters of her new book, 9 Secrets
of Women Who Get Everything They Want, are “Bite off
More Than You Can Chew,” “Don't Wait for the
Right Moment,” “Never Mind Your Own
Business,” “Wear Your Heart on your
Sleeve,” and “Covet Thy Neighbor's
Things.”

White is the newly-appointed editor of
Cosmopolitan magazine, after serving as editor-in-chief
of Redbook magazine. Her new book is available through
The Crown Publishing Group. Her first book, Why Good
Girls Don't Get Ahead but Gutsy Girls Do, was featured in
“The Union Bookshelf” in March 1997.

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Representing the NHL’s best

Posted on Nov 1, 1998

As a youngster, Jay Grossman '87 watched the New York Rangers at Madison Square
Garden, played hockey, and attended hockey summer camps
in Canada.

But when he discovered that his playing
skills wouldn't lead to a life in the National Hockey
League, he learned that working as an agent would offer
that opportunity.

So, during his junior year at Union, be
began analyzing videotape for the Rangers on weekends and
vacations (before the influx of satellites, hockey teams
needed personnel to go to games to scout out competitors
and search for new recruits).

Working part-time for Athletes and
Artists, a company representing big-name talent in
professional sports, Grossman began to establish
relationships with players at the high school and college
level. Today, he is vice president of Marquee Hockey,
part of Marquee Group/SFX Entertainment, which acquired
Athletes and Artists two years ago.

Grossman now heads the hockey division
of one of the largest sports and entertainment firms in
the country, which provides marketing services for the
sports, music, news, and entertainment industries. He
represents stars such as Brian Leetch of the New York
Rangers, Sergei Samsonov of the Boston Bruins, and Sergei
Zubov of the Dallas Stars.

Grossman says his part-time
undergraduate job was a good opportunity “because I
had the backing of the company to get to know these
players as people. While still a student, I started to
make contact with outstanding young players that are
still represented by the firm, such as Adam Oates and
Leetch.”

When Grossman began, he estimates that
there were twenty-five agents representing professional
hockey players; today, there are close to 200.

“The sports and entertainment
business has developed substantially in recent
years,” he explains. “The average salary of an
NHL player in 1991-92 was $368,000; in 1997-98, it was
$1.167 million. That is just one indication of how the
industry has grown.”

Grossman says that much of what he does
is similar to what was covered in the recent film, Jerry
Maguire — especially the complex nature of the
relationship between client and agent. “It's a
pretty demanding and challenging relationship,” he
says. “We really act as personal managers of our
clients, helping not only with contracts but also
providing advice about finances, taxes, endorsements,
advertising, and dealings with the media.”

Grossman emphasizes that many of his
clients are young — very young to be managing so much
money and fame. He points to one client, Sergei Samsonov
of the Boston Bruins, who was named Rookie of the Year
last year. At age nineteen, Samsonov makes $3 million a
year, and Grossman helps him manage that money, pay
taxes, handle immigration, and more.

“There are all sorts of things
that these young players need advice about, and they tend
to turn to us on a variety of those issues,” he
says. In turn, Marquee Hockey funnels information to a
variety of experts: lawyers, financial planners,
accountants, and others (Grossman has a law degree from
Benjamin Cardozo School of Law but doesn't practice law
in any traditional sense).

Grossman is always looking for new
clients and travels extensively, especially in Europe.
When he's home with his wife, Nancy Grundman '87, and
their children, Justin and Avery, he's watching hockey
and driving his kids crazy by changing the channel so
frequently that he sometimes has twelve games on at once.
He has no favorite team and usually roots for the players
he represents. What about his kids? “The jury's
still out on that. Our son is only four, but he tends to
like the players I represent, too.”

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