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Toy Show Takes Over Mandeville

Posted on Oct 22, 1999

The Schenectady Museum's collection of antique

toys will be exhibited in the Nott's Mandeville Gallery beginning with

an opening reception and gallery talk by toy collector and restorer Daniel

Briggs on Thursday, Oct. 28, at 4:30 p.m.

Briggs will discuss the history of toys and lead a tour

through the exhibition, beginning at 5 p.m.

Toys included in the exhibit are soldiers, musical

instruments, dolls, marbles and jacks, Noah's ark, paper dolls, board

games, trains and teddy bears.

“What strikes me about the exhibit is that it has

tremendous appeal for people of all ages,” said Rachel Seligman,

director of the gallery. “Children love toys, and, for seniors, the

exhibit brings back fond memories of days gone by.”

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Douglass to be Portrayed by Actor

Posted on Oct 22, 1999

Fred Morsell, a Shakespearian actor, will present

his portrayal of Frederick Douglass, a 19th-century escaped slave,

abolitionist, journalist, public servant, and champion of racial and

gender equality on Wednesday, Oct. 27, at 7:30 p.m. in Memorial Chapel.

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Kenney Community Center Established on Park Place

Posted on Oct 22, 1999

The College and the City of Schenectady on Tuesday

announced plans to allocate most of a $1 million gift from a local alumnus

toward the establishment of a community center within the College Park

neighborhood at 257 Park Place, the former Alps Grill.

The facility will be called the Ralph and Marjorie

Kenney Center, in memory of Ralph Kenney, a 1929 Union graduate. In June,

his widow, Marjorie Kenney of Delmar, donated $1 million to the College

with the understanding that the funds benefit Union and the City of

Schenectady.

“The Ralph and Marjorie Kenney Center will play a

vital role in the revitalization of the College Park neighborhood,”

Hull said. “It's wonderful to have the spouse of a Union alum who

shares my view that, whether individually or institutionally, we all have

an obligation to contribute to make Schenectady a better place to live.

This facility, and in a much broader sense, the US Initiative, are

tremendous assets for both the City and Union.”

The Kenney Center, scheduled for completion by January

2000, will feature health and wellness workshops sponsored by Ellis and

St. Clare's hospitals; Schenectady-based Girls Inc. of the Greater

Capital Region will provide programs for young women.

A primary feature of the new facility will be the

Homework Center and Skills Development Program. Staffed by Union students,

staff and GE Elfun Society volunteers, the homework program links Union

student mentors with children from the Van Corlaer Elementary School to

help them prepare for the New York State Pupil Assessment Tests, and

encourage them to develop study and learning skills.

About 20 Union students have completed a mentor-training

program; they will begin working with children from the College Park

neighborhood next week at a temporary location at Union. The Center has

received an $8,200 grant from Campus Compact, which is funded by the GE

Fund, to support the mentoring program.

Of the $1 million gift, about $600,000 will be used to

renovate, furnish, equipand maintain the center. Remaining funds will

offset costs of renovations to and the purchase of office equipment and

furnishings for the Union satellite Safety and Security Office at 712

Huron St.

The satellite office, to be completed in January, will

serve as a post for the College's safety and bike patrol. Officers from

the City of Schenectady's bike patrol will also use the facility during

neighborhood patrols. Finally, the office will have a waiting area for

students waiting to board the Union College shuttle service.

The Kenney gift adds to donations from Fleet Financial

Group to the Community Center; Fleet gifts to the Center currently total

$35,000.

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Calendar of Events

Posted on Oct 22, 1999

Friday, Oct. 22, through Monday Oct. 25, 8 and 10 p.m.

Reamer Auditorium.

Film committee presents Summer of Sam.

Tuesday, Oct. 26, 10 am

Arts 215.

David Brenneman, curator of European art at the High Museum of Art in

Atlanta, Ga., on “A Musical Masterpiece: Thomas Gainsborough's

Portrait of the Linley Sisters.”

Tuesday, Oct. 26, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Old Chapel.

Red Cross Blood Drive sponsored by Sigma Chi.

Tuesday, Oct. 26, 7 p.m.

Humanities 019.

Chinese film series presents Woman, Demon, Human (1988).

Wednesday, Oct. 27, 7:30 p.m.

Memorial Chapel.

Actor Fred Morsell portrays the 19th- century activist in “Presenting

Mr. Frederick Douglass.”

Thursday, Oct. 28, 4:30 p.m.

Mandeville Gallery, Nott Memorial.

Opening of exhibit of antique toys from Schenectady Museum, with gallery

talk by toy collector and restorer Daniel Briggs, who will also lead a

tour of the exhibition.

Friday, Oct. 29, 8 p.m.

Memorial Chapel.

Chamber series presents flutist Emmanuel Pahud and pianist Eric Le Sage.

Through Dec. 3.

Arts Atrium.

“Fields and Streets,” an exhibition of mezzotint prints and

pastels by artist Peter Jogo.

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Cases Lower Faith in Justice System: Survey by Prof. Fox

Posted on Oct 22, 1999

The upsurge in sensational media coverage of

high-profile trials and investigations during the 1990s is undermining the

country's faith in the criminal justice system, according to a survey by

Richard Fox, assistant professor of political science.

Focusing on seven of the decade's most-covered trials

and investigations, the survey of 1,000 randomly-chosen Americans finds

the cases having an adverse effect on how people view the system.

“Although the media has long been drawn to

sensational criminal trials, the attention it devotes to them has

increased exponentially in the past decade,” said Fox. “Clearly,

this phenomenon is having a profound impact – and not a healthy

one.”

The three most damaging cases – the O.J. Simpson

murder trial, JonBenet Ramsey investigation, and Clinton Senate

impeachment trial – cause, respectively, 75 percent, 70 percent, and 58

percent of the respondents to have less confidence in American criminal

justice.

Only 3 percent and 2 percent respectively have more

confidence as a result of the first two cases, the survey finds. And

despite the fact that Clinton's Senate trial ratified Americans'

overwhelming opposition to his removal from office, only 6 percent of

respondents say the trial has bolstered their faith in the system.

Less damaging in their effects but still negative

overall are three other high-profile trials – the first trial of the

police officers who beat Rodney King, the William Kennedy Smith rape

trial, and the Louise Woodward nanny trial. Only the case of the Menendez

Brothers, the sole defendants to be convicted and sentenced to long prison

terms, brings an increase in confidence among respondents, though a

decidedly modest one.

Not only do the seven cases lead people take a dimmer

view of American criminal justice in general, the survey finds, but they

feel less secure about how the system will treat them personally. Thus, 44

percent of the respondents say they feel less confident that

criminal-justice laws will protect their rights.

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