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Women’s Hockey at RIT For ECAC Quarterfinal Game

Posted on Feb 26, 2003

Head Coach
Fred Quistgard

The women's hockey team, which last weekend completed its best season since becoming Union's 25th varsity sport in 1999-00, will open the ECAC East postseason tournament Saturday at Rochester Institute of Technology. The opening face-off is set for 7 p.m.

Five years ago head Coach Fred Quistgard was hired as the program's first mentor. The 1998-99 team, which was playing its last year as a club sport, struggled against varsity competition. The first two varsity seasons saw the Dutchwomen finish 14 of 18 teams (they were 4-19-0 overall and 4-13-0 in the ECAC) and 17 of 19 (3-19-2 overall and 1-15-2 in the ECAC). Last year's squad finished the regular season in sixth place in the ECAC with a league mark of 8-9-1 (8-15-2 overall). The first round of the playoffs sent the Garnet to Troy where they lost to Rensselaer, 9-2.

Step-by-step, year-by-year, player-by-player, Quistgard has moved this program forward. On Saturday the team will find out just how much it has matured as the No. 5 Dutchwomen take on the fourth-ranked Tigers at 7 p.m.

Kate Gustafson

Union, which posted its first winning league record (10-9-1) and its best overall mark (11-13-1), will play an RIT team that is eager for revenge. Coming into the 2002-03 season, the Dutchwomen had never beaten the Tigers. The weekend of January 31 changed all that as Union celebrated Senior Recognition Weekend by sweeping RIT, 6-2 and 3-2.

“We are looking forward to our match-up with RIT,” said Quistgard. “They are a strong team that would like to avenge our sweep of them earlier this month. Advancing to the Final Four and competing for the automatic qualifier to the NCAA Tournament would be a tremendous step for our program.

“We have worked hard for the past four years to establish a competitive program,” he continued. “Now we want to win and show the hockey community that Union Hockey has arrived. This is a great opportunity to show our progress.”

Offensively, the Dutchwomen scored more goals (108) than any other time in their brief varsity history. Leading the charge are three sophomore forwards:
Liz Flanagan (Simsbury, CT/Loomis Chaffee) with 14 goals, 26 assists, 40 points,
Courtney Riepenhoff (Skillman, NJ/Choate Rosemary), who has 20-21-32, and
Molly Flanagan (Simsbury, CT/Loomis Chaffee) who has 14-15-29. Right behind that trio are seven other Dutchwomen who have double digit points. Freshman forward
Kate Gustafson (Kenora, ONT/Beaver Brae) leads the group with 8-21-29.

Union's defense is anchored by freshman goaltender Dana Smullyan (Salisbury, CT/Millbrook School), who has an overall
record of 9-10-1 with a save percentage of .873 and a goals against average of 3.89.

This will be Union's last year at the Division III level as they move up to Division I status for the 2003-04 season. The Dutchwomen will play 34 games next year, starting with an October 11 contest with Quinnipiac and ending on March 6 at St. Lawrence.

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Track & Field State Meet

Posted on Feb 26, 2003

Sean Washington
Top-ranked 55m

The men and women's track teams head North to St. Lawrence for the annual New York State championship meet. Both teams are looking to improve upon the seventh place finish (out of 14 teams) of a year ago.

Senior Justin Sievert (Wyoming, MI/ New Paltz (NY) won last year's shot put title with a throw of 15.91. He surpassed that mark with a throw of 16.04 meters two weeks ago at the UCAA championship.

Junior Sean Washington (Woodbridge, VA/St. Stephen's) goes into the meet ranked first in the state in the 55 meters at 6.46. Last year Washington set a site record at Newell Field House with a 6.45.

Classmate Bernie Carey (Dale City, VA/Episcopal) ranks fourth in the 200 meters with a 22.88.

On the women's side, junior Lisa Capomaccio (Wakefield, MA/Wakefield) is ranked sixth in the 3000 meters at 10:38.92.


For Complete Result please click below:

http://web.stlawu.edu/sports/nysctc/nysctcpage03.htm

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Men’s Swimming & Diving State Meet

Posted on Feb 26, 2003

Ridgley Harrison
Set to defend two titles.

It has been a busy couple of weeks for head swim coach Scott Felix, his assistant,
Shannon Felix, and diving coach Dan Kameny. Last week the trio took the women's swim to Syracuse for the annual New York State Championship meet (where the Dutchwomen finished sixth of 15 teams) and this weekend they take the men's squad to Rochester (to Webster High School) for the annual state championships.

“We are heading out with a solid team,” said Felix, who is hoping his Dutchmen can improve their fourth-place finish of a year ago. “I believe that we have worked extremely hard the past 20 weeks and we are ready for a solid championship performance. We are running up against strong opposition from Alfred, Lemoyne, Hartwick, RPI and Ithaca, which has won the championship the last four years.”

Senior captain Ridgley Harrison (Hackettstown, NJ/Morristown) is looking to defend the 100 and 200 freestyle championships he won last year, while sophomore
Elliot Sequin (E. Lansing, MI/Cranbrook-Kingswood) is determined to defend his 50 freestyle title. Senior
John Vandervoort (Centerville, MA/Barnstable) has a solid shot at the 200 IM after taking second last year.

Elliot Sequin
Won last year's 50 Freestyle crown.

Senior diver, captain Aaron D'Addario (Manlius, NY/Fayetteville- Manlius), had a solid dual meet season and wants to improve upon his sixth place finish in the one meter board and fifth place finish in the three meter board from a year ago. Junior
Adam Bekiaris (Central Valley, NY/Monroe-Woodbury) is also hoping to be among the top eight.

Sophomores Drew Rand (Falmouth, ME/Cheverus) and Alex Shevchenko (Ridgewood, NJ/Ridgewood) are the top returnees for the IM races while the distance crew of junior
Steve LaPlante (Easthampton, MA/Williston), sophomore Grant Vanderbeken (Bedford, NH/Manchester), senior
Amos Sheldon (Bloomington, MN/Blake) and sophomore Andrew Sparkes (West Hartford, CT/Conard) have been training well, according to Felix, and are ready for a big meet.

Felix is also expecting great things from freshmen DJ Hogenkamp (East Aurora, NY/East Aurora),
Aaron Phillips (West Hartford, CT/Conard), Pat Canniff (Latham, NY/Shaker), and
Matt Acciani (Cherry Hill, NJ/Cherry Hill East).

The Dutchmen's 800 and 400 freestyle relay teams captured state championship last year while the 200 free and the 200 medley relay teams were both fifth. Union placed sixth in the 400 medley relay.

“This is the most exciting time of the year,” said Felix, “And I believe that our men will step up for the competition.”

Complete results can be found daily at:

http://www.naz.edu/dept/athletics/swimming/unyscsa/index.html

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It is “Playoff Weekend” for Union’s Winter Teams

Posted on Feb 26, 2003

This weekend six of Union's eight winter intercollegiate athletic teams will see playoff action. Only the men's hockey team, whose hunt for an ECAC tournament title officially begins next week (March 7 & 8), have two regular-season games remaining. However, the Dutchmen, who host Vermont and Dartmouth this weekend, can bolster their playoff position if enough things go right for them.

Men's swimming is in Rochester for the annual state meet, the track teams are at St. Lawrence for the annual state meet, the women's hockey team travels to play RIT in an ECAC East quarterfinal showdown, the men's basketball team, travels to Hamilton for the four-team Upstate Collegiate Athletic Association championship tournament, and the women's basketball team goes North to St. Lawrence for the UCAA title event.

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Gazette story cites the Union-IBM connection

Posted on Feb 24, 2003

From the Sunday Gazette, Feb. 23, 2003
“Outlook 2003” supplement

Union College grads thrive in careers at IBM

“My father
worked for General Electric at the Research and Development Center in Niskayuna, so I was always exposed to technology, and
Union had a great reputation for that. But I also
found that there was such a tremendous liberal arts program there and that I
could also take world class courses in psychology and political science too,
which I did.”
John E. Kelly III
IBM senior vice president

By BRIAN McGUIRE
Gazette Reporter

SCHENECTADY – “What are you going to do with
that?”

It's a question every liberal arts
major has heard at least once – a rhetorical question that's meant to elicit
the following one-word answer: Nothing.

According to common belief, the
liberal arts are, well, worthless. Particularly for those who hope to
“make it” in the world.

And while famous exceptions exist –
former AOL Time Warner boss Gerald Levin earned his degree in philosophy;
master builder Robert Moses wrote poetry before reshaping the face of New York
City; and Bill Gates, the world's richest man, has no degree at all – the
perception that anything outside business or the hard sciences is a sure path
to penury or aimlessness is not likely to go away soon.

Unless, of course, business leaders
themselves begin to say otherwise.

Meet John E. Kelly III. A senior
vice president at IBM, Kelly attributes much of his success to a background in
science and the humanities. It's the type of training Kelly's alma mater, Union College, has pushed for years. And it's not
coincidental, Kelly and others believe, that three of IBM's 17 senior vice
presidents attended the Schenectady school.

Kelly graduated from Union in 1976 and was named a trustee at the
school earlier this month. As the senior vice president and group executive of
IBM's technology group, he directs thousands of employees and is closely
involved in IBM's work with Albany NanoTech.

Good reputation
A native of Albany, Kelly attended Bishop McCloskey High School (now Bishop Maginn) and earned a doctorate
in physics from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Kelly joined IBM in 1980.

“My father worked for General
Electric at the Research and Development Center in Niskayuna, so I was always exposed to technology, and
Union had a great reputation for that,”
Kelly said. “But I also found that there was such a tremendous liberal
arts program there and that I could also take world class courses in psychology
and political science too, which I did.”

Other Union grads who hold
executive positions with the Armonk-based company are Steven Mills, '73, and
Robert Moffat, '78. Mills controls IBM's entire software operation, shaping a
budget of more than $13 billion and directing more than 30,000 employees in a
division that accounts for more than one-third of IBM's profits. His degree was
in psychology.

“At Union, I took a very broad range of courses in
history, political science and literature,” Moffat said. “The
experience helped me develop a strong set of organization and communication
skills. . . . My education at Union gave me a lot of basic skills that have
been invaluable.”

Moffat is senior vice president,
IBM Integrated Supply Chain, a job that puts him in charge of three divisions
at the company: Personal Computing, Retail Store Solutions and Printing
Systems.

Moffat joined IBM in 1978 and spent
most of his career on the personal computer side.

In 1999, he was awarded the Franz
Edelman Award for work on advanced fulfillment, co-location and channel
collaboration initiatives.

An All-American track star in
college, Moffat was the NCAA Division III 400-meter dash champion in his senior
year. He said the discipline of track and Union's academic program were ideal preparations
for his current leadership role. “Beyond the obvious academic preparation,
Union has a unique trimester program that
simulated the business environment very well,” Moffat said. “In a
10-week trimester, you always needed to stay on top of your work and manage
your time, which was exacerbated because of the training required to maintain
All-American athlete stature.”

Charlie Casey, Union's news director, said he thinks the
school's emphasis on interdisciplinary work molds good leaders.

“None of these executives were
engineering grads,” Casey said. “That's something we like to tout,
and I think that's our special niche – that our graduates will make good
managers and executives.”

IBM seems to agree.

According to company records, IBM
employs roughly 400 Union graduates, and as recently as last March, gave the
school $1 million for a new Converging Technologies program.

The initiative is meant to
encourage hands-on work in cutting-edge technologies while at the same time
promoting study in the humanities. Kelly, Moffat and Mills were all on hand to
present the gift.

Important relationship
Kelly said he thinks the relationship between Big Blue and Union is significant.

“It's a very special
relationship in that we believe the quality of students we get out of there is
high – that their track record at IBM is generally very, very good,” he
said.

Which is not to say that the
relationship is unique.

According to Donna Mattoon, an IBM
spokeswoman in Albany, IBM gave more than $36 million to
educational institutions worldwide last year alone. Over the past 10 years, the
company has handed out more than $150 million.

The most likely recipients are
schools that already boast a broad science and technology infrastructure and
which graduate a high number of graduates in applied sciences. Before the
technology boom of the past two decades, science and computing companies were more
willing to hire people from a liberal arts background. Today, the hiring
landscape is considerably more specialized.

“Thirty years ago, companies
like IBM hired people with general degrees, such as psychology, and then put
them through rigorous training,” Mills said. “Today, we look for
people with a range of skills. [But] there is more emphasis on knowledge and
experience around information technology as a requirement to being hired.”

Still, the number of schools
receiving awards from IBM was limited to 100 and, Mattoon said, that puts Union in very good company.

“It looks to me like Union is in an exclusive club,” she said. As
part of the Converging Technologies program, which focuses on bioengineering,
mechatronics, nanotechnology and pervasive computing, Union students have
access to an IBM RS/6000 supercomputer at the University at Albany.

The computer, which is used to
solve problems associated with the development of miniature computer chips, is
equipped to handle the type of work that will be done at the Albany NanoTech
facilities on Fuller
Road
and should therefore increase the likelihood that Union graduates will stay in
the area after graduation.

Bill Schwarz, Union's director of corporate and government
relations, was one of 30 area leaders to visit Austin, Texas, with the Albany-Colonie Regional Chamber of Commerce in early
February. He said he hopes Union's academic offerings and its close
relationships with IBM and various other companies in the state will keep the
school's undergraduate population – 60 percent of which comes from states
outside New York – from leaving New York after graduation. Schwartz also said
the Capital Region's expected transformation into a technology center would be
compatible with a Union education.

“We are very confident that Union's blend of engineering and liberal arts is
a great preparation for that kind of environment,” Schwarz said.

Union's connection to IBM predates Kelly, Mills
and Moffat. Big Blue's founder, Thomas Watson Sr., delivered the school's commencement
address in 1953 and Watson's son, Thomas Watson Jr., gave the address in 1984.
Both Watsons have received honorary degrees from Union.

In 1963, John Irwin II, an American
ambassador to France whose mother was the sister of Thomas
Watson Sr., delivered Union's commencement speech.

Seniors at Union are eligible for a fellowship Thomas Watson
Jr., endowed at 25 small U.S. colleges in 1968. Today, the Watson
fellowships support one year of self-directed study abroad for students at 50
colleges in the country.

The Watson family has endowed one
professorship at Union, an engineering post. And IBM continues to
endow a scholarship for women and minority engineering students at the college.
According to college records, Union has received more than $1.6 million in
matching gifts from the company over a period of decades.

“At the risk of minimizing the
relationship Union has with other businesses, I would say the
IBM partnership is an important one,” Casey said.

IBM employs 319,876 people. Annual
revenue was $85.9 billion in 2001, with income of $7.7 billion. The company has
had five Nobel prize winners since incorporating in New York City in 1911. The most recent winners were in
1987.

As for Union's interdisciplinary approach, Casey said it
allows students to train in a science while at the same time gaining exposure
to the larger ideas and issues a manager will be expected to confront.

It's a philosophy that Kelly says
he learned over time.

“As I look back now, that was
a tremendous help to me,” Kelly said of taking classes outside his major.
“I had a much broader perspective than physics. I guess I'm living proof
of what they espouse.”

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