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Wells Book Considers City’s Changing Views of Death

Posted on Jan 21, 2000

When Robert Wells began his research on changing roles
and perceptions of death in Schenectady, he expected the project to take
only three or four years.

That was a decade ago.

Now, after visiting hundreds of cemetery plots and
combing through thousands of pages of diaries, letters and death
registers, Wells has finished his book, Facing the King of Terrors:
Death and Society in an American Community, 1750 to
1990 (Cambridge
University Press).

“It ended up that death was more prevalent in the
local records than I had expected,” said the Chauncey H. Winters
Professor of History. “I went to Special Collections when I was just
getting started, and said, 'Do you have anything here on this topic?'
Ruth Ann Evans (associate librarian emerita) suggested the diaries of
Jonathan Pearson (1835 graduate, professor and treasurer). I ended up
taking 137 pages of notes.

“This was symbolic of what I discovered,” he
said. “Expecting to find a little bit, I found a lot and it took me
quite a while to extract it all and make sense of it.

“Most historians … are curiously uninterested in
attitudes and practices regarding death,” he writes in the preface to
the book. “Yet there can be little that is more central to the human
condition or that gives greater insight into the central values of any
culture than attitudes and behavior when confronted with the most
impressive of all transitions: death.”

Wells, whose earlier research focused on marriage and
child-bearing, jokes that it was inevitable that he would come to study
death. But the stimulus to study death in Schenectady actually came from
Kurt Vonnegut's novel Cat's Cradle. The author used the city
and its residents as models for the story, and he clearly refers to Vale
Cemetery when he describes a cemetery surrounded by the city.

“I began to wonder why so large a piece of land
lying in the middle of Schenectady had been devoted to the dead,”
Wells writes. (The city expanded to surround what was once a rural
cemetery.) “At the time, I simply became curious about the location
of Vale and gradually about other aspects of how a community lives with
death.”

Besides geographical convenience, Wells found
Schenectady an ideal city to study because it had a community dating back
to the 17th century, an interesting geography that affected patterns of
mortality, and diverse populations that included French, English, Dutch,
Native Americans and African Americans.

With industrialization, the community's population
grew and became more diverse ethnically and religiously. As a result,
death and funerals shifted from being public events to being private ones.
In 1858, for example, one family displayed the body of a child on their
front lawn for some 3,000 mourners, an act that would have been
unthinkable only 50 years later. By the turn of the century, death had
become private as more people died away from the community, in hospitals;
arrangements were handled by professionals such as funeral directors in
funeral homes.

Wells used public records like death registers as well
as personal collections of diaries and letters to provide insight into
attitudes and customs about death.

Especially poignant was the book of Tayler Lewis, a
language professor at Union, who mourned the death of a 17-year-old
daughter by translating Biblical passages into several different
languages. The Civil War-era diary of Lewis' son, Charles, gives a
chilling account of Lincoln's assassination, which the writer witnessed
at Ford's Theater.

“Some say we are, today, a death-denying
culture,” Wells said. “I don't think that's quite right. We
have a vicarious relationship with death,” experiencing it at a
distance through television shows, movies and the news. “We may have
lost the vocabulary to speak of death, but in some ways we are still
immersed in it.”

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Union College sees increase in admissions applications, especially Early Decision

Posted on Jan 14, 2000

Schenectady, N.Y. – Union College has experienced a 7 percent increase in the number of applications for the Class of 2004, including a rise of 28 percent in Early Decision admission, comparing 1998 and 1999 figures.

“The numbers are really gratifying,” said Dan Lundquist, vice president for admissions and financial aid at Union. “Passing the symbolic 4000 application mark is an affirmation that Union is 'on the lists' of top students nationally. I attribute the increase, for the most part, to the College's enhanced efforts in external relations and recruitment; we do not actively encourage, through any campaign of marketing materials, students to apply early.

“Obviously, communications and marketing are only part of the story-the real reason students apply to colleges is because of their appreciation of the quality of the total experience. Union is a great college that deserves to do well,” according to Lundquist.

The increase in applications follows a record-setting year in 1998 that saw Union top 3,800 applications for a class size of about 520. Last year, Union accepted 46 percent of those who applied. This year 4009 students applied for those same 520 spots in the class. Of those, 211 applied Early Decision, up from 165 last year.

“We have seen a continuous increase in the quality and quantity of applications over the last decade,” Lundquist added. “The rise in Early Decision applications indicates clearly that Union is a first-choice institution for a growing number of students.” That's very validating for everyone who works in the admissions department, where applications have risen by almost 40 percent in the past nine years.

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Get on Board for Sox, Rockettes

Posted on Jan 14, 2000

From the Red Sox to the Rockettes, bus trips are being
planned this year for Union employees, their families and friends.

Sept. 9 — Red Sox v. Yankees at Fenway Park, Boston.
Price is $50-$60, depending on seat location. A $20 deposit is due Feb.
12. Only 55 tickets are available.

Dec. 2 — Radio City Christmas Spectacular, New York
City. Cost is about $60 per person. A $35 deposit is due Feb. 26. There
are three buses reserved, 165 seats.

For more information, call George Schiller at ext. 6108.

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AAC Minutes Listed

Posted on Jan 14, 2000

Jan. 3, 2000

1. The minutes of Nov. 8, 1999 meeting were approved.

2.Dick Sakala (Director of Athletics) met with the AAC
to explain the time commitment required of students involved with winter
sports.

3. The Committee discussed non-credit internships. A
first draft of an Internship Certification form that would be completed by
the student was examined.

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MLK Events Set for Monday Afternoon

Posted on Jan 14, 2000

Vinie Burrows, a pioneering black actor, will join
the College's celebration of Martin Luther King Jr. Day on Monday, Jan.
17, at 4 p.m. in the Reamer Campus Center Auditorium.

The event will include readings, songs and dance from a
number of students, faculty, staff and guests.

Burrows will be doing her one-woman show, “Walk
Together Children,” on the African American experience on Monday,
Jan. 17, at 8 p.m. in the Yulman Theater. It is free and open to the
public. A reception will follow.

She also is to meet with classes and student groups on
Tuesday, Jan. 18.

Burrows made her Broadway debut as a youngster with
Helen Hayes, in a play directed by Joshua Logan. She has appeared in six
other Broadway shows, many off-Broadway productions, and international
theater festivals in Paris and Berlin, in roles ranging from classical
Greek plays and Shakespeare to modern works. She has appeared with Mary
Martin, Claude Rains, Ossie Davis, James Earl Jones, Louis Gossett, and
Earle Hyman.

As a young performer, Burrows was undaunted by the
dearth of quality roles on the legitimate stage for black performers. She
created her own solo productions, and now has a repertoire of eight
one-woman shows. She has booked, produced, and directed her shows on more
than 5,000 college campuses, and featured on tours of Holland, Germany,
Denmark, Rumania, the United Kingdom, Algeria, Nigeria, Northern Ireland,
Japan, and Russia.

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