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As intern with NFIB, Goossen examines role of private enterprise

Posted on Aug 1, 2003

Jay Goossen ’04

Jay Goossen
'04, a double major concentrating in American history and East Asian history,
is participating in the NFIB Education Foundation internship program in Washington
this summer.

The eight-week
program educates students about the critical role that private enterprise and
entrepreneurship play in America's
success.

Goossen works
directly with NFIB's Federal Public Policy Department, which handles the
organization's legislative efforts. His primary responsibilities include
legislative research and attending Congressional hearings on small-business
issues.

NFIB is the
nation's largest small-business advocacy group and was ranked the most influential business lobbying organization
by Fortune magazine. 

 “I am extremely
grateful to NFIB for giving me a valuable opportunity that has helped me
prepare for my transition into the working world,” said Goossen. “I've really
enjoyed learning about government and politics and I hope to work in Washington,
D.C., after graduation.”

Goossen is also
participating in a summer program at Georgetown
University's Bryce Harlow Institute
on Business and Government Affairs where he is taking two classes that focus on the relationship between free enterprise and
government.

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This Nott is for the birds

Posted on Aug 1, 2003

Birds of a feather – George Woodzell, a master woodworker, and artist Peg Foley, sit with their creation, a replica of the Nott Memorial. The cedar scale version took Woodzell about three months to create from original plans archived in the Schaffer Libra

(The Nott birdhouse was acquired at the auction by Walter Causey '51, a man for whom the building has special meaning. “I used to study in the basement of the Nott,” he recalls. “It was a great place, very quiet with all the little cubbies.” Causey, a economics major who is retired from the state Department of Commerce, said he also has warm memories of playing lacrosse in Library Field against the backdrop of the building. The “birdhouse” — which he said is too nice to have outdoors — is on display in his Glenville home.)

The Nott Memorial, an erstwhile home for pigeons, is once again
“for the birds.”

Not the real Nott, which was fully bird-proofed as part of
it extensive restoration in 1995.

This Nott is a birdhouse measuring about two feet high. The
creation of Schenectady residents George
Woodzell, a woodworker, and artist Peg Foley, the structure is going up for
auction along with 100 other hand-built birdhouses. The auction benefits
Habitat for Humanity of Schenectady, which builds affordable housing for those
who qualify.

Birdhouses include a submarine, several outhouses, a
lighthouse and a caboose. None, it seems, matches the shape or size of the
Nott. “There's no other building like it,” says Woodzell, who spent three
months on his version.

Woodzell did the woodwork based on elevation drawings
supplied by the College's Special Collections. “Figuring out how to do it was
most of the fun,” he said of cutting the pieces from cedar to represent Union's
16-sided centerpiece building. Foley did the paint job, but only after
carefully surveying the building during many walks through campus, she said.

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