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Cui Jian concert postponed; effort to reschedule under way

Posted on Apr 9, 2004

Problems in obtaining visas have
forced the postponement of the April 9 concert by Chinese rocker Cui Jian.

The College and Cui Jian will make
every effort to reschedule the event, said Ted Gilman, professor of political
science and concert organizer.

Cui Jian's concert at Union
was to have opened a one-month North American tour. It is possible that the
Union concert could be rescheduled at the end of the tour, or that the entire
tour will be postponed.

Tightened security measures have
forced the cancellation and postponement of U.S.
performances by a number of foreign artists in recent months.

The College's Office of Communications
will announce further details.

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‘Background’ goes up tonight in Yulman

Posted on Apr 9, 2004

Ralph Alpher

He is an 83-year-old cosmologist whose pioneering work on
the Big Bang theory went largely unrecognized.

She is a young, prolific playwright who wanted
to create a play about a scientist who never received due credit.

Soon, they will meet for a staged reading of Background,
a one-act play about the life and career of Ralph Alpher, Union's distinguished
research professor of physics emeritus, written by Lauren Gunderson, 22, whose
acclaimed play took form in a freshman seminar at Emory University.

Directed by William Finlay, the play will
be read by professional actors on Thursday, April 8, at 7 p.m. in Union's Yulman Theater. Tickets are free. The
performance is sponsored by the Hewlett Foundation.

Fifty-six years ago, as a young doctoral
student, Alpher wrote the first mathematical model for the creation of the
universe and predicted the discovery of cosmic background radiation that proves
the Big Bang theory.

Though his work was celebrated at the time – 300
people, including reporters, packed the hall at George Washington University for his dissertation
defense – it was largely forgotten afterward. Decades later, two radio
astronomers tuning their equipment stumbled on proof of Alpher's background
radiation. They got the credit – and the Nobel Prize.

Fascinated by an article on Alpher in Discover
magazine (July 1999), Gunderson asked her professor if she could write a play
instead of a term paper. The result is an award-winning play about Alpher's
life and his quest for scientific credit. Using sparse dialogue, pauses and
metaphor, the play moves backward in time to mimic the study of cosmology.
There are four characters – Alpher, his wife, his daughter and a narrator who
also portrays minor characters.

Lauren Gunderson

While doing research, Gunderson called Alpher to
ask him the main question she had on her mind in developing the play:
“Would you have done anything differently?”

“Yes,” he said. “I would have
worked harder to get the credit I deserved.”

To Gunderson, she said, “it would be like
having my play go to Broadway and seeing someone else's name in the
program.”

Gunderson said that just talking to Alpher
helped her to understand his character: “It was mainly the directness of
his voice,” she recalls. “He is very clear and very concise. You can
tell a lot about a person by how they speak and what they communicate.”

The reading of Background on April 8 will
be the first time the scientist and playwright have met.

Alpher, who retired as research professor at Union and administrator of
Dudley Observatory, is a regular visitor at Union's physics department,
where his former colleagues recently gave him a birthday party. Last fall, he
read his own part in a staged reading of Background at the retirement
community where he lives with his wife, Louise, and a number of retired area
scientists.

Gunderson's early success has included
performances of her work on high-profile stages. In 2002, her play Parts They
Call Deep
was a winner in the national Young Playwrights Festival competition
founded by Stephen Sondheim and was one of only three winners selected for full
productions off-Broadway at the Cherry Lane Theater as part of the
festival. Gunderson has had other plays produced, including short plays at
PushPush Theatre in Atlanta and as part of the New York 10-Minute Play Fest.
One of her plays is a finalist for the Heidemann Award for 10-minute plays at
Actors Theatre of Louisville.

Background has just won the 2004 Essential
Theatre Playwriting Award, making Gunderson the first two-time winner of the
award. (Parts They Call Deep was a recipient in 2001). The new play
was produced as part of Essential Theatre's 2004 Festival of New American
Theatre in February. It was performed at City University of New York last year.

Staged reading of Background, Thursday,
April 8,
7 p.m., Yulman Theater. Free.
Sponsored by Hewlett Foundation. For more information, call 388-6131.

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Union’s new look features an old friend

Posted on Apr 9, 2004

Union's new logo

The Nott Memorial, the emotional
and architectural centerpiece of Union, is taking center
stage in the College's new logo being launched this week.

“To find a distinctive brand for
the College, we needed to look no farther than one of the most recognizable
symbols in higher education,” said Dan Lundquist,
vice president for admissions and financial aid. “Like no other symbol, the
Nott — in all its quirky grandeur — captures Union's
distinctive mix of tradition and innovation.”

The new
logo has been added to the College's web site, and can be used for new projects
immediately. However, the new image will be phased in over time, so offices and
programs need not waste stationery, for example. “We are not saying that
by noon tomorrow everyone must use the new logo,” said
Lundquist. “This will be rolled out over time and you will be seeing it
more and more.”

The
launch of the new logo is accompanied by an on-line “Style Guide” (available
to on-campus users only) that explains the various uses and includes downloads
of the logo and related typography. The guide is available at: http://www.union.edu/styleguide/ (Click on the navigation bar on the left side of the page.)

The new logo was a result of work
by a committee of students, faculty and staff with input from a range of
constituencies. Committee members, with Lundquist, were Ramsey Baker,
athletics; Peter Blankman, communications; Davide Cervone, mathematics; Donna
Davenport, College Bookstore; Jeremy Dibbell
'04; Tom McFadden, College librarian; and Mike O'Hara, College Relations. The
committee worked with graphic designer Maria Holdren.

'Casper, the friendly logo' — Ellen Casper '03, admissions counselor, shows off a banner with Union's new logo

The committee formed about a year
ago in response to an earlier design that some said was too abstract to convey
the distinctiveness of the building. One of the
committee's main goals was to develop a design that conveys the College's
distinctive centerpiece in a clean, elegant graphic that would be easy to
reproduce. A highly detailed logo would be difficult to reproduce in a variety of
media – print and electronic.

The new
logo replaces what some have called “the wavy Nott,” an image adopted as part
of the College's Bicentennial Campaign more than a decade ago.

The Nott
Memorial, a rare example of Victorian High Gothic architecture, is on the National
Register of Historic Landmarks. Completed in 1875 and fully restored for the
College's Bicentennial in 1995, it incorporates many eclectic elements of
architectural styles, religions and rationalism. For more on Union's
16-sided centerpiece, please visit: http://www.union.edu/Campus/Nott_Memorial/

The seal
of Minerva, the Roman goddess of wisdom, has shouldered the brunt of the
College's graphic identity since its founding in 1795. But the venerable icon
is too detailed for a range of print and internet-based applications. The seal will
continue to be used for official College documents – like diplomas, transcripts
and program covers. The adoption of the Minerva seal at the College's founding
was a radical innovation in that it incorporated a French motto: “Sous
les lois de Minerve nous devenons tous frères”
(“We all become
brothers under the laws of Minerva”).

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Cui Jian concert is postponed

Posted on Apr 8, 2004

Problems in obtaining visas have
forced the postponement of the April 9 concert by Chinese rocker Cui Jian at Union
College.

The College and Cui Jian will make
every effort to reschedule the event, said Ted Gilman, professor of political
science and concert organizer.

Cui Jian's concert at Union
was to have opened a one-month North American tour. It is possible that the
Union concert could be rescheduled at the end of the tour, or that the entire
tour will be postponed.

Tightened security measures have
forced the cancellation and postponement of U.S.
performances by a number of foreign artists in recent months.

The College's Office of Communications
will announce further details.

Read More

Exhibits

Posted on Apr 2, 2004

Through May 23
Mandeville Gallery, Nott Memorial
“China/Cuba/Vietnam: Recent Photographs by Martin Benjamin.” Reception is Thursday, April 8, from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m.

Through April 16
Humanities Lounge
Gallery Exhibition of photographs by Peter Blankman, director of communications and
publications, whose works have captured everyday life, uncommon events, and the
beauty found on campus.

April through June
Arts Atrium Gallery
Senior exhibitions

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