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Union’s Megann Denefrio named Big Sister of Year

Posted on Nov 18, 2002

Megann Denefrio '03 and her “little,” Stacey


Megann Denefrio, raised as an only child, couldn't help wondering what having a little sister would be like. So when she arrived at Union College three years ago, she decided to become a “Big” to a “Little” named Stacey.


Since then, Denefrio and Stacey have done a lot together, spending up to five hours a week at things like apple picking, hockey games, movies, holiday parties and Stacey's favorite: joining Denefrio and her friends in the College dining halls. “She loves to eat with the big kids,” Denefrio says.


On Dec. 12, Denefrio, now a senior political science major, will be honored as Big Sister of the Year by Big Brothers Big Sisters of the Capital Region.


A native of Blauvelt, Rockland County, Denefrio is a 1999 graduate of Saddle River Day School.


The Big Brothers Big Sisters Club is one of the largest student clubs on the Union College campus. Last year, with Denefrio as president, more than 100 Bigs – about 5 percent of the student body – were matched with Littles. She worked with Big Brothers Big Sisters staff to increase communication among the Bigs, and to increase the opportunities for promoting Big Brothers Big Sisters on campus. Denefrio serves this year as the club's treasurer.


“I had heard a lot about the Bigs program at Union before I arrived,” Denefrio said. “So a friend and I decided to give it a try.”


Denefrio, who will graduate in June with a degree in political science, plans to go to Washington next year to gain experience in a congressional office. She and Stacey have discussed their future, and they plan to stay in contact, Denefrio says.


The experience has been valuable to Stacey for showing her opportunities, and to Denefrio for developing an appreciation for the value of mentoring, she says.


“(The experience of being a Big) has shown me a lot about how education and involvement with kids are important,” Denefrio says. “It has also shown that we need to have more programs so that kids can know what is available to them and to see what their options are.”


Besides her involvement with Big Brothers Big Sisters, Denefrio has been active in the College's admissions office, serving as a senior intern; as a member of the U-Program board, which coordinates student activities; and as president of the Pi Sigma Alpha, the political science honor society. She is a resident of Wells House, a Union theme house whose residents commit to community service projects.


An accomplished tennis player, she has been a member of the Union team for all four years. This season she served as captain, helping her team to a third place finish in the state tourney.


For more about Denefrio's award and Big Brothers Big Sisters of the Capital Region, visit:
http://www.bbbscr.org/newArticles.asp#BBBSYear

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Exhibits

Posted on Nov 15, 2002

Through Nov. 22
Humanities Gallery
“Silk Spaces,” a series by Schenectady
artist Arlene Baker, which the artist calls “an exploration of the aesthetics
of the sublime on an intimate scale.”

Through Nov. 27.
Social Sciences Gallery
Photo exhibit by students on term
in Ireland.

Through Dec. 8
Arts Atrium Gallery, Arts Building

“Impressions from Nature's
Notebook,” works by painter Stephen Tyson.

Through Dec. 22
Mandeville Gallery, Nott Memorial
“Reaching for the Stars – The Story of
the Dudley Observatory,” an exhibit with lectures, a film series and
nights observing the skies. For a complete listing of events, visit: http://www.union.edu/N/DS/s.php?s=2996

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Events

Posted on Nov 15, 2002

Friday, Nov. 15, 7:30 p.m.
F.W. Olin Center Auditorium
Films: A Trip to the
Moon
(1902, 14 min.) and Koyaanisqatsi
(1982, 87 min.). Part of the Mandeville Gallery exhibition, “Reaching for
the Stars — The Story of the Dudley Observatory.”

Friday, Nov. 15, 8 p.m.
Achilles Rink
Women's hockey vs. MIT

Friday, Nov. 15, 8 p.m.
Yulman Theater
Mountebanks
presents “The Wrong Box,” a play adapted from the classic book by Robert Louis
Stevenson and Lloyd Osbourne. Written and directed by Kit
Goldstein '05. Other performances are Saturday, Nov. 16, 8 p.m., and Sunday, Nov. 17, at 2 p.m. Admission free. For more information,
call (518) 388-6812.

Friday, Nov. 15, through Monday, Nov. 18, 8 and 10 p.m.
Reamer Campus Center Auditorium
Film: Signs

Friday, Nov. 15, 9:30 p.m.
College Observatory, F.W. Olin
Center
Observatory open house, weather permitting

Saturday, Nov. 16, 1
p.m.

Achilles Rink
Women's hockey vs.
MIT

Sunday, Nov. 17, 3
p.m.

Memorial Chapel
Concert by Union
College Community Orchestra, Victor Klimash, conductor. For more
Information, call (518) 388-2232.

Wednesday, Nov. 20,
at
8
p.m.

Reamer Campus
Center Auditorium.
The Union College
Jazz Ensemble and the Tim Olsen
Band performing a concert of jazz standards and contemporary.

Sunday, Nov. 24, 2
p.m.

Nott Memorial
Panel Discussion: “The Future of Astronomy” with Professor
John Delano, Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, University at
Albany; Professor Rebecca Koopmann, Department of Physics, Union College;
Professor Wayne Roberge, Department of Physics, RPI; Dr. Eric Schlegel, Center
for Astrophysics, Harvard University. Part of the exhibit and lecture series, “Reaching for the Stars – The Story of the
Dudley Observatory.”

Sunday, Nov. 24, at 3 p.m.
Memorial Chapel
Union College chamber concert series presents the Pacifica String
Quartet with pianist Ursula Oppens in a program of works including Berio's Sonata per Pianoforte; Schumann's Sonata No. 2 in g; Mendelssohn's String Quartet in e, Op. 44, No. 2; Elliott
Carter's String Quartet No. 2; and
Dvorak's Piano Quintet in A, Op. 81. Tickets:
$20, $8 for students. For more information, call (518) 388-6490.

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Pacifica String Quartet performs Nov. 24

Posted on Nov 15, 2002

The Pacifica String Quartet with
pianist Ursula Oppens will perform on Sunday, Nov. 24, at 3 p.m. in Union
College's Memorial Chapel.

The concert, part of the Union
College chamber concert series, will feature a program of works including
Berio's Sonata per Pianoforte; Schumann's
Sonata No. 2 in g; Mendelssohn's String Quartet in e, Op. 44, No. 2; Elliott
Carter's String Quartet No. 2; and
Dvorak's Piano Quintet in A, Op. 81.

Members are Simin Ganatra and
Sibbi Bernhardsson, violins; Masumi Per Rostad, viola; and Brandon Vamos,
cello.

Oppens, who has won equal renown
as an interpreter of the established repertoire and a champion of contemporary
music, this year appears as a soloist with orchestras in West
Virginia, Illinois,
Maryland, Iowa
and Washington. Besides her
ambitious performance schedule, she is the John Evans Distinguished Professor
of Music at Northwestern University
in Evanston, Ill.

Tickets, at $20 ($8 for students),
are available at the door. For more information, call (518) 372-3651.

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‘The Wrong Box’ opens friday, Nov. 15

Posted on Nov 15, 2002

“The Wrong Box,” a play adapted from the classic book by Robert
Louis Stevenson and Lloyd Osbourne opens Friday, Nov. 15, at 8 p.m. in Yulman Theater.

The play, a two-and-a-half hour musical presented by
Mountebanks with an 11-member cast, was written and directed by sophomore Kit
Goldstein.

Set in late Victorian England, “The Wrong Box”
is the story of an elderly gentleman, Joseph Finsbury, who is a member of a
tontine – a fund which will pay a substantial sum to the last surviving member
– and his scheming nephew Morris, who would do anything to inherit his uncle's
winnings. When Joseph is involved in a train wreck and assumed dead, Morris
does everything in his power to cover up the death and win the tontine, and
mass confusion and chaos ensue.

Included in the cast are Jeff Silver, Michael Woodrow,
Becca Hutton, Alex Given, Jane Yoon, Julie Francis, Guy Goldstein, Jhulian
Newell-Little, Alexi Nowell, Dana Smullyan, and Kristina Yost.

Besides Goldstein, the production crew includes Josh Dubbs
(producer), Anchia Kinard (stage manager), Nathan Stodola (music
director/pianist), Nina Kalinkon (sets), Ashlyn Andersen and Umber Gold (costumes),
and Cooper Braun-Enos and Evan Reid (lights and sound).

This is the fifth play Goldstein has written or co-written
(with sister Umber Gold '00). She has produced three musicals (including a
revue based on Freshman Preceptorial that was presented during Steinmetz
Symposium last spring), one comedy and a historically-based dinner mystery. She
began work on “The Wrong Box” last spring. It has been in rehearsal since the
start of fall term. Goldstein is a native of Niskayuna.

Other performances are Saturday, Nov. 16, 8 p.m., and Sunday, Nov. 17, at 2 p.m. in the Yulman Theater. Admission is
free. For more information, call (518) 388-6812.

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