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Philip Ball: Nothing scary about nanotechnology

Posted on Feb 27, 2003

Philip Ball during visit at Union

“What is the scariest thing?” science writer Philip Ball asked
at the opening of the Founders Day convocation on Thursday. “All writers of
thrillers and detective stories would agree: it's the thing we cannot see.”

Speaking on “Nanotechnology in Fact and Fiction,” Ball
went on to describe the promise of machines and structures at the molecular
scale.

Ball, a consulting editor of Nature who has published seven books and
a number of articles on popular science, received an honorary doctor of science
degree at the ceremony. He visited with a number of faculty and students and
spoke to several classes during his two-day visit to campus. He gave a public
lecture, “The Age of Molecular Engineering,” on Wednesday evening.

“New technologies make a good scenario for a thriller,” he
said at the Founders Day ceremony. “[But] I'm not losing any sleep over [it].”

“The number of components on a chip roughly doubles every
18 months,” he said. “But there are limits.”

So, we need new ways of making things smaller. Enter nanotechnology.

The first clear vision of nanotechnology came in 1959 from
Richard Feynman, who discussed the possibility of manipulating and controlling
things on a small scale. “It seemed an almost absurd challenge,” Ball said of
the reaction at the time.

Two decades later, Eric Drexler predicted that nanotechnology
would have medical applications for repairing damaged tissues, even spinal
column injuries, Ball said. “Since it operates on the scale of viruses, it offers
new possibilities.”

More recently, scientists at IBM developed a scanning
tunneling microscope (STM) capable of seeing and “pushing” individual atoms.  “It feels its way over a surface with a very
fine needle, and uses it to drag atoms around,” Ball said. “You could fit the
entire Bible onto the surface of a human red blood cell.”

Nanotechnology is still a fledgling science, almost a
technological philosophy, he said, and it requires the same creativity of pioneers
like Edison working on a much smaller scale.

As with any new technology, nanotechnology brings with it
an ethical dimension that could spur a debate on all technology, he said. “The
first step is a fully informed public — that's the gap we have to close. “

Hawley Award

Herbert Taylor, an English teacher
at Hamburg (N.Y.) High School, received the Gideon Hawley Teacher Recognition
Award, He was nominated by his former student, Heather Lockrow '05.

Lockrow cited Taylor
in her nominating essay for being the “epitome of an educator – filled …with
knowledge, passion, care, and perhaps most importantly, respect for his
students.” She also wrote that Taylor
“enters the class each day with the willingness and desire to share the joys of
English language and literature” and that he “pushed people to do their best …
excel in and out of the classroom.”

Taylor
is a 1971 graduate of Rutgers University
and a 1973 graduate of Colgate University.
For 18 years, he served as chair of the English Department at Hamburg
High School. During his tenure, Taylor
has taught senior English and Advanced Placement English. Taylor
has been honored for his teaching by the University
of Richmond and SUNY-Fredonia.

The Gideon Hawley award is named
for the 1809 Union graduate who was a pioneer in education and teacher
development as well as New York's
first superintendent of public education. The award is presented annually to a
high school teacher who most influenced a current Union
College freshman or sophomore.

Lawrence J. Hollander, former dean
of engineering, presented the Hollander Convocation Musician Prize to pianist Tian
Tian '05, who played Fantasie-Impromptu
Op. 66
by Frédéric Chopin.

James E Underwood was installed as
the Chauncey Winters Professor of Political Science. He has been a Union
faculty member since 1963. He has been dean of the faculty, chair of the
political science department, chair of the social sciences division, director
of the General Education program, and advisor to many students in the College's
internship programs in Albany and Washington,
D.C. Chauncey Winters, a 1912 alumnus,
established the professorship that holds his name through a bequest in 1982.

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Students’ success becomes ours, says Stillman winner

Posted on Feb 27, 2003

Prof. Steven Sargent

Steven Sargent, who received the
Stillman Prize for Excellence in Teaching, recalls the pride he felt in
watching a former student present her research at a conference.

“Christine Brennan ('91) was the
best researcher I ever supervised for senior thesis,” said the professor of
history. “After graduate school she became a curator of the medieval collection
at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.  I hadn't seen her in several years, and
watching her present her research among established names in her field made me
feel proud and grateful to have had a hand in her intellectual development.”

He also recalls a chance meeting
at a Schenectady restaurant with another former student who had taken his
European history survey: “He said that he had found the course very stimulating
and as a result had become a history major, gone on to graduate school, and
ended up teaching American history at Guilderland High School. He came over to
my table, he said, to thank me for having gotten him interested in history and
influencing his choice of career.”

Encounters like those, Sargent
says, illustrate the significance and rewards of teaching at Union
College. “Since my first term in
the Fall of 1982, I have always strived to awaken in my students a love of
learning, a strong curiosity to understand how the past affects the present,
and a desire to use their educations to enrich their adult lives.”

Sargent began his professional
life as a systems engineer at Bell Telephone Laboratories in Holmdel,
N.J. But when he wasn't working as an
engineer, he immersed himself in English literature and medieval history, his
passion since ninth grade. It was C. Warren Hollister's Medieval Europe: A Short History that prompted him to re-start his
career as a historian.

He went on to earn his Ph.D. from
the University of Pennsylvania,
writing his dissertation on the social history of medieval religion, his area
of specialization.

He arrived at Union
in 1982 to what he calls a “good environment, a place where a student can be an
engineer and study the humanities.” Sargent recently teamed with Prof. Ashraf
Ghaly to offer a course called “Construction for Humanity,” which investigated
the history of human building.

“I encourage my students to
consider their education as a golden opportunity to seek out and adopt ideas
that will aid them in constructing a meaningful life,” he said. “If they are to
resist simply becoming products of their culture and to have real choices about
how to live their lives, young people must have lots of ideas to choose
from. 

“The most important stimulus to
great teaching is caritas or love of
one's fellow human beings. An appreciation of history as a humanistic
discipline drives my enthusiasm in class, and the goal of getting the students
to think deeply about their lives leads me to present them with significant
intellectual challenges. 

“In the end, the real joy of
teaching comes from helping young people become successful human beings. Second
only to their parents, teachers play a crucial role in forming students'
characters. The joy we feel when we see them presenting scholarly papers or
reporting on their personal and professional achievements rests on the
satisfaction of having helped them realize their human potential. Their success
becomes our success and enriches our lives. We in turn communicate our joy to
each new generation of undergraduates and transmit to them the lessons of
living well. Long after we retire, our efforts on their behalf will bear fruit
in their lives and in those of the people they love. Given the opportunity to
produce so much good, who could resist feeling joyful?”

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Men’s Hockey Could Host Playoff Series

Posted on Feb 26, 2003

Nathan Gillies

The last time that the men's hockey hosted a playoff game was on February 27, 1990 when they lost to Mercyhurst, 5-4, in the ECAC Division II West quarterfinals. The 13-year dry spell has come to an end as the Dutchmen are assured of either hosting an ECAC first-round series next weekend (Friday and Saturday, March 7 & 8) or receiving a first-round bye, depending on what happens during this weekend's final two regular-season games.

This is the first year that the ECAC tournament will allow all 12 of its members to join the playoff party. Prior to this season only the league's top 10 finishers earned playoff berth. Union, which joined the Division I league prior to the 1991-92 campaign, qualified for postseason five times. Ironically, Union's first trip to the playoffs, which came in 1993-94, saw the upstart Dutchmen travel to Troy and hand arch-rival Rensselaer a 4-3 loss. Unfortunately, the Garnet lost the next two games at Houston Field House and go into this year's tournament looking to snap a nine-game playoff losing streak.

“It's nice, because, obviously, in our Division I history we've never had a chance to play a home playoff game,” said head coach Kevin Sneddon. “For our fans, it's been a long process; they certainly deserve to see a playoff game in our rink. I think that's great.”

Jason Kean

Achilles Rink has been the site of numerous ECAC and NCAA playoff games over the years. In fact, the 1984-85 team hosted what would now be called the “Frozen Four”, finishing third in the country after losing to RIT in the opener, 3-2, and then beating Plattsburgh, 9-6, in the consolation game.

This weekend's regular-season finale finds Vermont (Friday at 7:00) and Dartmouth (Saturday at 7:00) in town.

The Dutchmen can't finish any worse than eighth (considering all the tie-breakers) and could climb as high as fourth (the top four teams receive a first-round bye with positions five through eight hosting the first round games). In order for the Garnet to capture that first-round bye, they would have to sweep this weekend and look for both Brown and Dartmouth to be swept (Brown hosts St. Lawrence and Clarkson).

If everything breaks just right for the Dutchmen (a Union win and Brown and Dartmouth losses on Friday), Saturday's Senior Appreciation Night showdown with Dartmouth will be HUGE!

Marc Wise


Ticket prices for the ECAC playoff series have been set and are as follows:

  • Box $10
  • Bleacher $8
  • Student Box $10
  • Student Bleacher $5
  • Children – Ages 12-4 are $5
  • Children – 3 and under are free

Union College faculty and staff will pay face-value on all tickets. Tickets are on sale now at the Achilles Rink Box Office. Opponent and dates of the series will be determined after this weekend.

A hospitality tent will be available each night of the playoffs starting at 5:30 (closing 2 minutes into period one) and during intermissions (closing 2 minutes into the second and third period). Tickets to the hospitality tent will be available to season ticket holders first. Remaining tickets will be available at the box office beginning Tuesday morning at 10:00 a.m.

Getting back to this weekend, on Saturday, immediately following the game with Dartmouth, the Dutchmen players and coaches will honor the five members of the senior class. They are: defenseman
Randy Dagenais (Val Rita, ONT/Collingwood), forward Kris Goodjohn (Calgary, AB/Bowness), defenseman
Jason Kean (Nanaimo, BC/Dover Bay), forward, and captain, Nathan Gillies (Cambridge,ONT/St. Benedict's), and goaltender
Marc Wise (Aspen, CO/Aspen).

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Women’s Basketball in UCAA Tourney at SLU

Posted on Feb 26, 2003

Emily Scott

The semi-final games of the women's tournament, which will be held at St. Lawrence (23-2 overall and 14-0 in the UCAA), pits the 21-3 Dutchwomen (11-3 in the UCAA) against Rensselaer (16-8/10-4) at 6 p.m. while the Saints take on Hamilton at 8 p.m. The championship is set to tip-off Saturday at 4 p.m.

This will be the third meeting between the two Capital District rivals. Union captured a 79-72 decision in Troy with Rensselaer needing an overtime session to win in Schenectady, 73-69.

Guards, sophomore Melissa Marra (Mechanicville, NY/Mechanicville) and freshman
Kate DeSorrento (Schaghticoke, NY/Catholic Central) pace an offense that is averaging 72.4 points a game. Marra, last year's UCAA “Rookie of the Year” is averaging 11.3 points while DeSorrento is at 11.0. Sophomore forward
Katlyn Cunningham (Clarksbury, MA/Drury) is the team's other double digit scorer at 10.1 and leads the Dutchwomen with her 5.4 rebounding average. Freshman guard
Erika Eisenhut (Mohawk, NY/Mohawk) is averaging 9.9 points a game with 56 assists (second on the team), 65 steals (second), 24 three-point field goals (first) and 50 rebounds.

She will be playing on a court where her older sister Meredith
was a standout and earned last season's WBCA Division III “Playerof the Year” award.

Courtney Shepard

Freshman forward Courtney Shepard (Pittsfield, MA/Pittsfield) has come on strong of late and finished the 24-game regular season as the Dutchwomen's second-leading rebounder (4.9) and fifth-leading scorer (8.6). Three-year starting point guard,
Taryn Scinto (Westwood, NJ/Immaculate Heart Academy), is the glue that keeps this young team (just one senior) together. Scinto is averaging 2.8 assists and 6.7 points to go along with a team-high 70 steals (or an average of 2.92 a game) with 70 rebounds. Scinto is tied for second on the squad (with Marra) with her 23 three-point field goals.

The success of the Dutchwomen's season is spelled: D_E_F_E_N_S_E!!

Union's full-court pressure defense has limited the opposition to an average of 57 points a game while forcing 650 total turnovers, an average of 27.1 per game. The Garnet has been able to take advantage of those miscues, averaging almost 25 points a game as a result of turnovers.

Eileen Lowry

Junior forward Kelly Baker (Cutchogue, NY/Mattituck-Cutchogue) has contributed 34 steals and a team-high 21 blocked shots to go along with her 78 points, 85 rebounds and 30 assists. Sophomore guard
Eileen Lowry Wyckoff, NJ/Ramapo) comes off the bench to play an “In Your Face” type of defense that has produced a multitude of
turnovers including her 21 steals. Freshman guard Nicole Cerniglia (Ridgefield Park, NJ/Ridgefield Park) and sophomore
Emily Scott (Concord, NH/Derryfield) have combined with senior guard
Jill Ring (Brewster, MA/Nauset) and freshman guard Jen Pangburn (Norwich, VT/Hanover) to give the Dutchwomen solid bench depth. Cerniglia is averaging 4.3 points, 2.5 rebounds, and 1.5 steals while averaging just over 11 minutes of playing time. Scott, meanwhile, is averaging 3.9 points and 3.0 rebounds while averaging 16 minutes.

Eighth-year head coach Mary Ellen Burt has led the Dutchwomen to a three-year record of 67-36.

After finishing the 2001-02 season as NCAA runner-ups and ending with a program record 28-4, expectations remained high for the 2002-03 Saints. However, with the graduation of three starting seniors, including WBCA Division III “Player of the Year” Meredith Eisenhut, no one expected the squad to win its final 16 games and produce the most wins in the program's history.

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Men’s Basketball In UCAA Tourney at Hamilton

Posted on Feb 26, 2003

Bob Montana
Has 99 Career wins.

The basketball teams both finished second in the Upstate Collegiate Athletic Association's regular-season standings so both squads will compete in this week's four-team championship tournaments. The winner of each tourney will receive the UCAA's automatic bid to the NCAA Championship Tournament.

The women are enjoying a record-setting year with their 21-3 overall record (11-3 in the UCAA) under eighth-year head coach
Mary Ellen Burt, who goes into the weekend with 93 career coaching victories, all at Union.

Meanwhile the men, who lost four starters from last year's team, surprised a lot of people with their 15-10 (10-4 in the UCAA) standard. This marked the fifth consecutive season that seventh-year head coach
Bob Montana has guided the Dutchmen to a winning season. Montana's next victory will be the 100th of his career, all at Union. The program enjoyed eight non-losing campaigns from 1979-80 through 1986-87, including two .500 seasons (in 1983-84 and 1985-86).

The men's tournament, which is being held at Hamilton, the league's regular-season champions, will pit Union against No. 3 St. Lawrence in Friday's 6 p.m. semi-final game while the homestanding Continentals take on Hobart at 8 p.m. The championship game will be held at Hamilton on Saturday at 3 p.m.

Ryan Freundlich
UCAA Co-Forward
of the Week

Last Friday in Memorial Field House, the Dutchmen avenged an earlier two-point loss at the hands of the Saints with an 81-60 victory that snapped SLU's eight-game win streak. On February 1, the homestanding Saints rallied from a 10-point deficit with 3:20 left to play to capture a 73-71 win over the Dutchmen.

Guard Phil Henry (Flushing, NY/Chaminade), the team's lone senior, goes into the weekend leading the Dutchmen with his 14.7 scoring average. He has had two solid games against the Saints, scoring 19 and 11 points, respectively. Freshman guard
John Cagianello (Wethersfield, CT/Wethersfield), who is averaging 14.4 points, has also had some success against St. Lawrence, scoring 10 points in Canton and 20 points last weekend.

Sophomore forward Devon Bruce (Guilderland, NY/Guilderland) has missed most of the last three games while recovering from back problems. Bruce, who is Union's leading rebounder with an average of 7.0 and is third in scoring at 11.7, has seen junior forward
Ryan Freundlich (Springfield, NJ/Dayton) do a solid job as his replacement. Freundlich, who came into the year with a total of 85 points and 67 rebounds in 34 games, was named the
UCAA's “Co-Forward of the Week” for his three-game performances against Williams, St. Lawrence and Clarkson. The 6'6, 225-pound Freundlich scored 36 points with 14 rebounds and five assists in those contests. He finished the week with an .809 field goal percentage (17 of 21) that included an 8-9 performance against the 22-1 Ephs and a six for seven effort against St. Lawrence. His 17 points against Williams was a career high.

Union's two-headed point guard, sophomore T.J. Ramey (Ballston Spa, NY/Ballston Spa) and freshman
Chris Murphy (Hastings-on-Hudson, NY/Iona Prep) have combined for 142 assists, 40 steals, 57 rebounds and 242 points. Most importantly, however, is the fact that the two have only 85 turnovers between them giving them an assists to turnover ratio of 5.68 to 3.40. Both play extremely tight defense and both do a solid job running the offense.

Brian Scordato

Freshman forward Brian Scordato (Mt. Kisco, NY/Horace Greeley) and junior forward
Imbrie Packard (Bala Cynwyd, PA/Lower Merion) could very well be the ones that turn the tournament in Union's favor. Neither player is very flashy during the game, but when the final box score is produced, both, more often than not, have but up some impressive .
numbers

Scordato averages 9.8 points, 5.6 rebounds, 2.72 assists, 1.44 steals, is shooting .494 from the field (including .423 from three-point range) and .667 from the free throw line. He has blocked nine shots and is averaging just 1.44 turnovers a game. Packard, meanwhile, is averaging 5.3 points, 3.3 rebounds, 2.52 assists, 1.0 steals, is shooting .425 from the field (including .392 from behind the arch) and .719 from the charity stripe. He has blocked a team-high 31 shots and is averaging 1.28 turnovers.

The Hamilton-Hobart semi-final game is also a rubber match with each team winning on its home court. The Continentals captured a 61-52 decision in the first meeting then lost in Geneva, 103-101 in double overtime.

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