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Project set for Frank Bailey Field

Posted on Feb 1, 2002

The College will shortly begin a project to replace the
seating and press box at Frank Bailey Field, and build four
restrooms and a concession area for the facility, it was announced
by President Roger Hull.

The project will replace the wooden bleachers with seating
for 1,500. An enclosed press box with seating for 50 will replace
the scaffolding-supported press box that has been in place since
1984. There will be 30 seats for those who are physically challenged.

Plans are to begin the project this spring, and have it
completed for the fall 2002 season. The cost is about $1.7 million, which
is being supported by donations from alumni, parents, friends
and corporations.

“The renovation at Frank Bailey Field addresses a
facilities need that we have faced for a long time,” said Hull. “The project is
an important element in our Plan for Union to make our facilities
– academic, residential and athletic – among the finest of the
nation's liberal arts colleges. I thank the donors for their contributionts
to this project.”

Frank Bailey Field, named for the long-time trustee
and treasurer of the College, is used for intercollegiate contests by
the College's football, field hockey, lacrosse and track teams.
A number of other teams and intramural programs use the
all-weather facility for training and games, respectively.

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Democratic leisure retained at Saratoga Springs: Jon Sterngass

Posted on Feb 1, 2002

Time was, American vacations were
“see-and-be-seen” affairs in which people of all social classes mixed in immense public spaces – hotels, parks and casinos.

Professor Jon Sterngass

But that changed with the privatization and
commercialization that came with the rise of capitalism in the late
19th century. In Newport, exclusive and
lavish “cottages” of the wealthy
replaced the grand hotels and public spaces. Meanwhile, in
Coney Island, savvy marketers shifted the resort's focus to
offer amusement for the masses, selling leisure as a commodity.

Then there's Saratoga Springs, relatively
unchanged since the early 1800s when Gideon Putnam's grand hotels
tapped into the popularity of the mineral water spas. Today, more than
50 years after the hugely successful Grand Union and U.S. hotels
were demolished, the city still boasts what Henry James lambasted
in an 1870 travel sketch as “a momentous spectacle:
the democratization of elegance.”

That democratized elegance is precisely what makes
Saratoga Springs so special, according to Jon Sterngass, author of
First Resorts: Pursuing Pleasure at Saratoga Springs, Newport
and Coney Island
(Johns Hopkins University Press). The
374-page book is an unusual multi-site historical study spanning
a century of American leisure at the Northeast's best-known
playgrounds.

“There has been a gradual loss of public space in
America,” says Sterngass, visiting assistant professor of history. “We used
to hang out in the street and play in the park. Saratoga – with
its racetracks, parks and performance spaces – has retained
the sense of public space that was unique in the last century.”

Take Saratoga's famed racetrack, for example. “You
have the Vanderbilts and the Whitneys next to all these guys
from Yonkers Raceway and they're all peeling off bills and betting on
the horses,” says Sterngass. Too, the Saratoga Performing Arts
Center takes a democratic approach: “You'll have the ballet one
night and Dave Matthews the next.”

“There's no place like Saratoga,” says Sterngass,
himself a proud resident of the city since 1993. “It's a magical place
where anything can happen,” Sterngass says, referring the track's
reputation as a graveyard of favorites.

Sterngass grew up in Brooklyn, making regular trips
to Coney Island and Broadway shows. His book also has
its roots in the 13 summers he spent as a camper and counselor
at Camp Boiberik outside of Rhinebeck, where he “learned
the pleasures of unusual rituals enacted in a setting far away
from home.”

Later, while he pursued his master's degree from the
University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, and his Ph.D. from City University
of New York, he became fascinated with the idea of a vacation being
a kind of secular pilgrimage. “In every culture there is a kind
of pilgrimage that is outside the ordinary, the mundane,
the everyday. There's still that yearning, that tremendous
drive for a break.”

So, what is Sterngass' ideal vacation? Certainly not
Disney with all its trappings of commercialism, he says. “I'm
repressed,” he admits. “I'm not like the
people in the book who sit out on the porches. I like to travel
along reading about the history of places and talking with my wife.”

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Across Campus

Posted on Feb 1, 2002

Quick Fix

With just 61 seconds left in overtime, the men's
hockey game against Dartmouth last Friday came to a crashing
halt after a player shattered a plate of glass … or so many
fans thought.

But those who left would have done well to wait it
out: Union's faithful saw some exciting scoring
opportunities, even if they had to settle for a 3-3 tie.

It took the Achilles Rink crew a mere 13 minutes
to clear the debris and install a new piece of glass.

“We're ready to go at every game,” explains
Charlie Mackey, rink maintainer. “Everyone (on the rink
crew) has an assigned job and they know exactly what to do.”

Glass plates break between two and four times in
an average season, mostly during practice, according to
Mackey. (They used to break more often years ago when
cooler temperatures in the building made the plates more
brittle, he notes.)

Shattered glass is something of a rarity during a
game, he says, but the crew is always ready with between
8 and 10 spare plates of various sizes. When they're in a
hurry — as they were on Friday –they'll make a temporary
fix with a relatively lightweight piece of Lexan. The
tempered glass plates weigh over 200 pounds, even more for
the thicker plates that go behind the goals.

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