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Faculty, Staff Works Listed

Posted on Nov 5, 1999

Don Arnold, professor in the

Graduate Management Institute, presented a paper (co-authored with R.

Bernardi) titled “Retention and Promotion to Senior Manager and

Partner: A 7.5 Year Study of Moral Development” at the American

Accounting Association's 1999 Accounting, Behavior and Organization's

Research Conference in October. Also, a paper by Presha Neidermeyer,

assistant professor in GMI and Prof. Arnold (also co-authored with

R. Bernardi) titled “The Effect of Independence on Decisions

Concerning Additional Audit Work: A European Perspective” is to be

published in Auditing: A Journal of Practice and Theory.

Donna Burton, government

documents and reference librarian, gave a presentation at the New York

Library Association's annual conference on “Government Documents

for School and Public Libraries,” which covered some of the Internet

resources available from the Federal government and the best ways to find

the material online. She also had a software review of “Historical

Statistics of the United States on CD-ROM; Colonial Times to 1970,”

published in the Pergamon Press' Journal of Government Information (26-3;

May/June 1999) in which she concluded that this title was better retained

in its print version, supplemented by the digital.

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Unlocking Lock 23

Posted on Nov 5, 1999

Civil engineering students, along with a citizens

group known as the Locktenders, have been working this fall to restore

abandoned Erie Canal Lock 23, in its time one of the busiest parts of the

waterway.

Lock 23, known as the “Gateway to the West,”

is a half mile east of Lock 8 along the Mohawk Bikepath.

Andrew Wolfe, professor of civil engineering, is

overseeing the restoration project. The hope, he says, is to make the lock

the centerpiece of a cultural park celebrating the Erie Canal.

Built in the 1840's and used until 1915, Lock 23 was a

major transfer point at the west end of the 17-mile portage from Albany

around the Cohoes Falls. Many passengers left the Erie Canal to travel

overland to Albany; goods stayed on barges for the two- or three-day trip.

Since early this fall, students and other volunteers

have been clearing trees and brush from the site, revealing a fascinating

example of early 19th-century engineering. Measuring 200 feet long and 18

feet wide, the 20-foot high walls are constructed of 1- by 2- by 4-foot

blocks of native bluestone. They were brought to the site by canal and by

horse-drawn wagons, and put in place with horse and mule teams, according

to Wolfe.

Among the unusual finds at the site are the buried

remains of the heavy oak lock doors. (“We plan to use a crane to lift

them out,” Wolfe says.) A close look at some of the stones along the

top of the canal shows grooves worn by the ropes that pulled the barges

through the lock.

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Fiji.net Connects Students With Campus, Families

Posted on Nov 5, 1999


Apryle Pickering ‘01 with her homestay "nana" in this photo from Fiji.net.


Rakiraki, on Fiji's central island of Viti Levu, is some 8,000 miles and 16 time zones away, about as far as you can get from Schenectady.


But you wouldn't know it from Fiji.net, an interactive Web site that brings seven students doing anthropology field work in the Pacific archipelago as close as your nearest computer.


With few clicks, you can check in on Erinn Gregg '00, Megan Lee '01, Michelle Nason '01, Apryle Pickering '01, Stephanie Sienkiewicz '00, Emily Sparks '00 and Andy Spitz '01.


There are dozens of photos of the students with their homestay families, detailed field notes about everything from learning local customs to joining celebrations, and e-mails, lots of e-mails. The site is popular with the students' friends on campus and with students in Introduction to Anthropology. Naturally, the site's biggest fans are parents and other family members of the students.


Fiji.net is the brainchild of Prof. Steve Leavitt of anthropology, who with his wife, Prof. Karen Brison, is leading the field program. Leavitt, who updates the site almost daily from Fiji, says he hopes his “experiment” can be useful in creating a model for connecting the campus to students abroad.


“We've never done anything like this with a term abroad before,” said Bill Thomas, director of International Programs. Thomas, who accuses Leavitt of being somewhat modest about his creation, adds that he thinks the site can be a model for connecting students abroad with the campus. (Union's “virtual term abroad,” started in 1996 by Prof. Ron Bucinell, uses the Internet to join design teams of Union's mechanical engineering students with their counterparts at the Middle East Technical University in Ankara, Turkey.)


Leavitt says he found during the 1997 Fiji term that students were a “bit more diligent” in their field notes if they knew an “interested-but-uninformed audience” – their parents — would be reading.


Leavitt has been involved in a collaboration with Hobart and William Smith Colleges to explore ways to enhance connections between students on campus and those abroad.


“One way to follow through on these things was to develop a Web site chronicling the progress of the term abroad,” Leavitt said last week via e-mail from Fiji. “From there, I came up with the idea of including the two sections of Introduction to Anthropology. I wanted it be interactive, so I developed the idea of e-mail questions/comments going back and forth.”


The “intro” classes, taught this fall by Prof. Ian Condry, have always had a strong field component (such as writing ethnographies on area bingo halls), so it was natural to involve those students, Leavitt said.


Fiji.net shows the anthropology department's strong emphasis on field research by undergraduates. “There's no question that (ethnographic field school) is the ultimate term abroad experience,” said Chair George Gmelch, who developed the Barbardos field term on which the Fiji program is modeled. “The students are out there living in the community by themselves, and that forces them to examine the host society in ways that do not happen in a classroom.”


Leavitt says he thinks the site may be valuable to the Fiji students long after the term is over. “They'll be able to read each others' notes, show Web photographs to friends, alert professors and fellow students to passages that may relate to issues they're studying.


“The parents have loved it, and that alone has justified the time we've spent,” he adds. Says Susan Pickering, mother of Apryle: “It's wonderful that you can feel so close. As a parent you are apprehensive and you miss them so much. To see their pictures and see what they are going through is very reassuring.” Adds Corki Gregg, Errin's mom, “I don't know how our family would have made it through these past eight weeks if not for the Web site.”

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NEH to Support Med. Ethics Study

Posted on Nov 5, 1999

The National Endowment for the Humanities has

awarded a three-year grant of $181,500 to Robert Baker, professor of

philosophy, and a colleague, Laurence B. McCullough of Baylor College of

Medicine, in support of their project, “A History of Medical

Ethics.”

The award, one of 40 collaborations funded by NEH's

Humanities Research Division, supports an international conference

involving the 57 scholars.

“A History of Medical Ethics,” a comprehensive

925-page, one-volume history, is to be published by Cambridge University

Press in 2002. Supplementing the 21 chapters will be short accounts of

major biomedical ethics texts, short biographies of major figures,

extensive bibliographies and indices of both names and subjects.

The project involves experts from Africa, Asia, the

Middle East, Europe, and North and South America. Among the countries

represented are Argentina, Canada, China, France, Germany, Hungary,

Israel, Italy, Japan, Kenya, the Netherlands, South Africa, United Kingdom

and the U.S.

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Calendar of Events

Posted on Nov 5, 1999

Through Nov. 7.

Yulman Theater.

Antigone presented by

Performing Arts. Shows at 8 p.m. except Sunday matinees at 2 p.m. Tickets

$7 ($5 for students and seniors). For information, call ext. 6545.

Friday, Nov. 5, through Monday Nov. 8, 8 and 10 p.m.

Reamer Auditorium.

Film committee presents Runaway Bride.

Saturday, Nov. 6, 8 p.m.

Memorial Chapel.

Union College Orchestra, Hilary Tann directing, presents “Fall for

Beethoven,” a program to include Overture 2000 by Gwyneth

Walker; Flute Concerto by Dimitrij Kabalevsky with flute soloist

Alexa Papazian '00; and Symphony V in C Minor by Beethoven.

Monday, Nov. 8, 7:30 p.m.

Mandeville Gallery, Nott Memorial.

“Nursery Rhymes and Children's Poetry,” readings and discussion

with Millicent Lenz, teacher of children's literature at the Library

School of the University at Albany. In conjunction with exhibit of antique

toys from the Schenectady Museum.

Tuesday, Nov. 9, 1:30 p.m.

Yulman Theater.

Writer/director Murray Horwitz on “The Triumph of Marketing.”

Tuesday, Nov. 9, 7 p.m.

Humanities 019.

Chinese film series presents Rouge (1987).

Wednesday, Nov. 10, 8 p.m.

Reamer Auditorium.

Union College Jazz Ensemble, Tim Olsen directing, performs standards by

Scott Joplin, Miles Davis and Wayne Shorter as well as student works.

Thursday, Nov. 11.

Admissions Open House.

Through Dec. 3.

Arts Atrium.

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

pastels by artist Peter Jogo.

Through Dec. 19.

Mandeville Gallery, Nott Memorial.

Exhibit of antique toys from Schenectady Museum.

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