Union College News Archives

News story archive

Navigation Menu

Galletta to Open Senior Year In Sixth Place on Union’s All-Time Scoring List

Posted on Feb 14, 2001

Aaron Galletta
Enters his senior year
with 1,286 points.

Junior forward Aaron Galletta (Hyde Park, NY/F.D. Roosevelt) completed another outstanding season for the Dutchmen and will enter his senior year in sixth place on Union's all-time scoring list with 1,286 points. Galletta, who tallied 423 points in 25 games this season after scoring 465 points in 29 contests last year, is six points behind Ken D'Orazio (Class of 1985).

While Galletta would need a career year (and 504 points) to catch all-time leading scorer Joe Cardany's (Class of 1981) total of 1,790, the 6'7, 170-pounder needs only 347 points to surpass Jim Tedisco's (Class of 1972) 1,632 points for second place. Galletta scored 398 points as a freshman.

Two other Dutchmen will join the 1,000-Point Club early next season. Juniors Dave Musella (Loudonville, NY/Bishop Maginn) and C.J. Rodgers (Chicago, IL/St. Rita's) have 994 and 942 points, respectively.

The Dutchmen's 13-12 record gave the team its third consecutive winning season for the first time since the 1980-81 through 1982-83 campaigns. The Garnet last had four-straight winning seasons from 1979-80 through 1982-83.

Read More

Sarah Ellman Wins 3-Meter State Title

Posted on Feb 14, 2001

Sarah Ellman

Junior diver Sarah Ellman (Wayland, MA/Wayland) brought home the Dutchwomen's only state championship in last weekend's meet at Union. Ellman captured the 3-meter dive by scoring 378.50 points. Ellman, who finished fifth on the three-meter board and sixth on the one-meter board in the 2000 championships, took second in this year's one-meter dive with 343.75 points.

The Dutchwomen, who had finished fourth each of the last two years, took home third in the 14-team meet by scoring 1,037 points.

Read More

Dutchmen Swimmers Will Battle for State Title This Weekend

Posted on Feb 14, 2001

The men's swim team, which has finished third in the New York State Meet each of the last two years, are among the five teams expected to battle for the title in this week's meet at Nottingham High School in Syracuse. The Dutchmen won four consecutive state championships from 1995 through 1998.

Union, Ithaca, Hartwick, Rensselaer and Alfred are the teams expected to replace Hamilton, which won last season's state title but will forgo this year's event in order to participate in the New England Small College Athletic Conference championships.

“There is no clear cut favorite among the top five schools,”

said head coach Judy Wolfe. “Each team has its strong points and each team has its depth in different areas. This will be a very interesting weekend. Hopefully we can rise to the challenge.”

Wolfe is counting on six swimmers to carry the bulk of the load for the Dutchmen this weekend. Sophomore Ridgley Harrison (Hackettstown, NJ/Morristown), freshman Adam Retersdorf (Mayfield, NY

Gloversville), senior Nathaniel Martin (Kensington, CT/Avon), junior Kyle Schack (Huntington Woods, MI/Kingswood), sophomore Steve Eberlein (Troy, MI/Brother Rice) and sophomore John Vandervoort (Centerville, MA/Barnstable) provide the nucleus for the Dutchmen. Besides their individual events, the above mentioned swimmers will make up the relay teams, which earns 64 points for a first place finish. The Dutchmen are expecting to do particularly well in the 400 and 800 freestyle relay events.

Wolfe is also counting on some key diving points from sophomore Aaron D'Addario(Manlius, NY/Manlius Fayetteville), freshman Adam Bekiaris (Central Valley, NY/Monroe) and junior Erik Seholm (Hunstville, TX/St. Mary's).

Kyle Schack
swims the butterfly

Trials begin each day at 10:30 a.m. with the finals starting at 6:30 each evening. An all-session pass is $10.00 with a $1.00 charge for single-session pass for the trials and a $2.00 charge for a single-session pass for the finals. Tickets can be purchased at the door.

Read More

Fish Safety Net Frayed By Acid Rain

Posted on Feb 10, 2001

Change in water pH appears to disable chemical predator alert


In a bleak, ground-floor laboratory stacked high with algae-covered aquariums, Grant Brown sets fish in motion.


After just a few drops of a chemical naturally stored within some fishes' skin are added to the water, the four fathead minnows in each aquarium dart skittishly about, nosedive to the bottom of the tank, then huddle together motionless.


“About a half a gram is enough to scare everything in an Olympic-size swimming pool. It doesn't take a whole lot of this stuff,” said Brown, an assistant professor of biology at Union College.


The strange dance staged in Brown's laboratory is similar to behavior seen in nature. When a yellow perch or other predator pierces the flesh of a smaller fish during an attack, some species release chemicals known as alarm pheromones into the water to warn other fish in the area that it's dangerous to hang around.


Picking up the “scent” causes some species to duck behind aquatic plants. Others freeze in mid-swim. Some plunge to the bottom to get out of harm's way.


But what Brown has discovered — in hundreds of trials like the one described above — is that the chemical signals get crossed when the pheromone is introduced to fish living in slightly acidic waters. The same amount of pheromone released into a tank treated with sulfuric acid induces no response from the minnows.


What that means, according to Brown, is that declines in fish populations could be happening in acidic lakes well before acid rain really begins to take its toll, killing off food supplies and destroying reproduction.


Scientists have typically focused on lakes that have higher concentrations of acid, studying such phenomenon as the leaching of aluminum and the formation of methyl mercury, a toxic metal that makes eating the fish risky. But in the Adirondacks, about 26 percent of the 2,800 lakes are at the same pH — a measure of the amount of acid in water — at which Brown has performed his experiments. Some are that way naturally, others are at that pH because of power plant pollution blown east from Midwestern plants.


Even more troublesome is that 30 fish species living in Adirondack waters rely on alarm pheromones to avoid being eaten.


“The alarm pheromone is a survival mechanism. When the pH changes, the fish lose that valuable survival mechanism, and become more vulnerable to predation,” said Bob Daniels, a fisheries biologist at the State Museum familiar with Brown's work.


Daniels was excited about the research.


“People have done research on alarm pheromones, but what happens to those chemicals when they enter waters with a low pH is new,” Daniels said.


Brown, who worked with Union College organic chemist Jim Adrian on the experiments, has discovered that acidic water conditions were changing the chemistry of the alarm pheromone, making it unrecognizable to the fish. The linchpin in the pheromone's chemical structure — which Adrian has isolated and can produce en masse in the lab — is a bond connecting nitrogen to oxygen. Without that link, the compound is useless as a warning signal. The idea that acid rain could tinker with that bond came up when Brown was perusing the scientific literature.


“The idea came up from this funky little nitrogen oxide group,” Brown said pointing to a diagram of the chemical structure. “The literature says it's a relatively unstable compound that's rock solid in neutral, or basic conditions” but susceptible to breakage in acidic waters.


“When you lose the nitrogen oxide, you lose the function of the alarm pheromone,” he added.


Brown plans to submit a paper on his work to the journal Environmental Biology of Fishes. This summer, he will venture into the Adirondacks to test his theory, placing traps — one surrounded by sponges soaked with the warning chemical, another treated only with distilled water — in streams and lakes at various acid concentrations. If his theory proves correct, in acid waters fish will swim right past the pheromone and into his trap.


“In neutral water, the chemical scares the bejesus out of them,” Brown said.

Read More

College Mourns Ruth Anne Evans

Posted on Feb 9, 2001

The College community this week mourned the loss of Ruth Anne Evans, the former associate librarian whose seemingly total recall of Union history made her something of a campus legend.

Evans died Feb. 2 at the age of 76 after a long illness. Funeral services were Tuesday at St. John the Evangelist Church followed by a reception in Everest Lounge, Hale House.

A native of Schenectady, Evans joined the College in 1952 as an assistant cataloguer in the library after earning degrees at Smith College and the Columbia School of Library Science. She was named a full professor in 1973 – the first woman to be awarded that rank at the College – and became associate librarian in 1984. She retired in 1989, although she continued to come into the library on an almost daily basis to help with a variety of projects and to continue her lifelong practice of mentoring younger librarians.

Trained as a reference librarian, she became known as the principal reference for anyone wanting to know anything about Union's history. As a colleague once said, “If Ruth Anne doesn't know it, it didn't happen.”

At Evans' retirement party in 1989, then-librarian Ann Seemann said, “She serves as campus historian, albeit informally, with an acute sense of humor and almost total recall. Her wisdom and her wit abound in anecdote and fact.”

Her College service included Conservatorial Committee, Phi Beta Kappa nominating committee, and committees to pick candidates for Watson Fellowships and the St. Andrews Exchange.

She received the Faculty Meritorious Service Award from the Alumni Council in 1975, and she was elected to honorary membership in the Delphics, a student service organization (in recognition of her assistance with student projects, in particular their planning of Fitzhugh Ludlow Day festivities).

She was a member of the Schenectady Historical Society, where she held several positions; the American Library Association; the American Association of University Professors; the American Association of University Women; Phi Beta Kappa; the Capital District Library Council; and the New York Library Association. She was a volunteer for the Literacy Volunteers of Schenectady and was a member of St. John the Evangelist Church and its Rosary Society.

Survivors include a niece, Madelaine Ann Estabrook of Waltham, Mass.; and three nephews, Carl Estabrook Jr. of Champaign, Ill.; Joseph Estabrook of Centerville, Va.; and David Estabrook of Arlington, Va.

Contributions may be made to the Literacy Volunteers or the Schenectady Historical Society.

Read More