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Union college leader to exit

Posted on Jan 9, 2005

SCHENECTADY –(Jan. 11, 2005) Union College President Roger Hull will leave the school at the end of June, ending a 15-year tenure in which the college almost tripled its endowment and led the rehabilitation of an adjacent neighborhood.


Hull, 62, wants to start a charitable foundation that will inspire disadvantaged grade school students to seek college educations.


“It's been a great run,” Hull said. “I've had a lot of fun doing a wide range of things.”


Trustees of the college credited Hull with improving both the school and its home city.


Hull's 15-year run was problematic at the beginning. There were 107 empty dormbeds in his first academic year, enrollment was 63 students below the budgeted figure and the school's $50 million budget was $2 million in the red. The student speaker at Hull's first commencement said Union trustees “made a mistake” in hiring him.


“It was not the most fun I've had as a president, that first year,” Hull said.


But he turned it around, ultimately lasting about nine years longer than the average university president does.


Hull said he was proudest of not having to lay anybody off during his time at Union. “We have not moved this place forward on the backs of the people that work here,” he said.


Cliff Brown, a political science professor and chairman of Union's faculty executive committee, said he was sorry to see Hull go.


Brown, who has been at Union for 25 years, said Hull was able to overcome his rocky start by bringing in good people and raising the quality of students who attended the school.


Looking back, Brown pointed to several Hull initiatives as successes. The creation of a new house system that will foster a greater sense of community; the $11 million restoration of the 16-sided Nott Memorial, a campus showpiece now far removed from the broken-windowed eyesore it had become; and the school's investment in Seward Place are among his legacies, he said.


Since 1998, Union has spent more than $26 million in that neighborhood on the western edge of campus. Last fall, the school opened a new dormitory in a former Ramada Inn.


While it is de rigueur for schools to invest in surrounding neighborhoods around them — Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and Russell Sage College are among the local institutions participating in the trend — Hull has been credited for bringing the concept to the Capital Region.


Schenectady Mayor Brian U. Stratton said Hull's work on the Seward Place project has created a model for other city neighborhoods to emulate.


Hull was appointed Union's 17th president in 1990 after serving as president of Beloit College in Wisconsin for nine years.


Hull said there is a “90 percent chance” that he will remain in the Capital Region as he starts his foundation, which currently has no home and no backing.


His goal is to start with a network of about a half-dozen colleges across the country that will open their doors to low-income grade schoolers to come twice a week after school and once a month on Saturdays. Those students would then attend the program until they graduate high school.


A similar program Hull helped start at Beloit has helped 275 pupils — 95 percent of whom have gone on to college.


The best part about it, he said, is that “you're changing people's lives.”


But while he has an idea, he's going to hold off on building it up until he's left the school.


“I've got six months to go and I just want to make sure I keep my streak of balanced budgets and full enrollments going,” he said.

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Hull to quit post at Union College

Posted on Jan 9, 2005

SCHENECTADY – Union College President Roger Hull, who led efforts to integrate the 210-year-old institution into the city's social and economic tapestry, will step down June 30. He intends to start a nationwide foundation to help grade-school children prepare for college, outside normal channels. Hull, 62, the college's 17th president, has served for 15 years. Before joining Union in 1990, he served for nine years as president of Beloit College in Wisconsin.

ANA ZANGRONIZ
Gazette Photographer
Union College President Roger Hull stands on the college’s campus on Monday after announcing that he plans to leave the school.

He told Union's board of trustees over the weekend that he planned to step down.


“I've been a college president for 24 years. I've had as good a run as I possibly could,” he said during a Monday afternoon news conference at the college.


The board will immediately create a search committee to find his successor, said Frank Messa, co-chair of the college's “You Are Union” campaign.


“We are very sad to see him go. He has accomplished so much for the college,” Messa said. Hull will remain president through the end of the current academic year. His salary was reported at $290,000 annually. He lives on campus with his two high school-age children.


Hull plans to remain in the area but is interested in establishing a charitable foundation that will serve at-risk students across the country. He started a similar program while president of Beloit.


Town – gown catalyst


Union spokesman Bill Schwarz said, “It's fair to say that when Roger arrived, Union was very much the ivory tower. He will be most remembered for bringing the college into the community and for bringing the community into the college.”


In a phone interview, Union trustee Neil Golub said Hull “made some major changes in the quality of the college's education, in how it's run, in how it interacts with the community, in expanding its facilities and in bringing new students to the college.”


“He brought a process of change,” Golub said.


Hull integrated the college's liberal arts program with its technology program; increased the college's efforts to help students study abroad; and boosted undergraduate research.


Hull's strength is in the area of fund raising, Messa said. During Hull's tenure, the college's endowment tripled to $250 million; the college is in the midst of a $250 million campaign.


“With that endowment, Roger and the board have been able to accomplish many of the objectives he and the board set,” Messa said.


Seward Place effort


One objective was to spur renewal on the periphery of the campus. Through the Union-Schenectady Initiative he launched in 1998, the college pumped more than $26 million into Seward Place, Huron Street and Nott Street, neighborhoods west of the college.


The college bought and renovated more than three dozen buildings, converting most into student housing. The area is known as College Park.


The initiative also offers free tuition to the children of homeowners in the area, provided they keep their homes in good condition and the children meet academic standards. It also subsidizes mortgages of Union faculty who buy houses there.


The college last year also purchased the former Ramada Inn on Nott Street and transformed it into a residence hall for 230 students. Behind it sits a new lighted athletic field, which is open to the community. The rebuilding work made major improvements in an area on the rim of the campus that was once blighted and trouble-prone.


Hull launched the U-Start business incubator project in 1998. The project allows Union students to become entrepreneurs and test their business concepts in the academic environment.


Almost upon his arrival to Union as president Hull launched a community service program for incoming freshmen. Schwarz jokingly called it “mandatory volunteerism.”


The program exposes students to the community and “is a wonderful statement because so many students continue their service in the community,” Schwarz said.


Messa said fully 50 percent of the college's 2,100 students participate in community service projects.


In 1993, Hull and Golub formed Schenectady 2000. Its goal was to attract companies, create jobs and help revitalize the city.


Schenectady 2000 never reached its full promise, but it did help spur the creation of something far bigger: the Metroplex Development Authority. Along the lines Hull and Golub envisioned, the county Legislature petitioned the state government to create the local authority to float bonds for downtown projects. That was in 1998.


Metroplex has since served to attract more than $100 million in investment in the county, $70 million of that in downtown.


“What's going on today with Metroplex and [Chairman] Ray Gillen is the result of Schenectady 2000. This community has taken a big step forward,” Golub said.


Hull is reluctant to take sole credit for any of these initiatives. “We've done it,” he said, placing emphasis on “we.”


“We have a track record recognized around the world,” Hull said. “We've been able to build the institution but not on the backs of the staff. This was all done without layoffs.”


Hull made some enemies among alumni of the college's Greek-letter organizations in recent years as his administration took over several fraternity houses on campus for use as offices and dormitories.


During Hull's tenure, Union has taken steps to limit the influence of fraternities on campus social life, despite their unique place in the college's history. Union is known as “The Mother of Fraternities” because the first three – Kappa Alpha, Delta Phi and Sigma Phi – were founded at the college in the 1820s.


Foundation vision


Hull said the foundation which he plans to create will provide seed money to colleges and universities that want to establish an educational program for at-risk students. The program would use college students to teach fourth-graders a Latin-based curriculum in an after-school setting.


“I have the vision but I have no money,” he said. His Wisconsin program obtained outstanding results, he said, and he hopes to duplicate it nationwide.


He wants to establish the program on a small number of college campuses initially and then broaden the effort each year.


“The point is to take this and go national. It's the right idea at the right time. There's nothing like it in the United States,” Hull said.


Hull leaves Union with the distinction of serving the fourth-longest term of any president in the college's history.

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Exhibits

Posted on Jan 7, 2005

Jan. 10 through Feb. 27
Dyson Hall, Nott Memorial
“Friends: One Day, One Wrong Turn” about the effects of a November
2000 car crash at Colgate
University that claimed
the lives of four college students.
Opening reception is
Thursday, Jan. 13, from 5 to 7 p.m. The show is open during regular Nott
Memorial hours: daily from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. For more information, call ext.
6004.

Through March 18

Social Sciences Gallery
Photographs from anthropology term in Tasmania

Opening Jan. 6
Blue House communal rooms
Installation of student digital photography curated by Prof. Martin Benjamin and Michael Mosall,
photography lab tech. Features 21 photographs from student projects.

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Events

Posted on Jan 7, 2005

Friday, Jan. 7, through Monday, Jan. 10, 8 and 10 p.m.

Reamer Campus Center
Auditorium
Movie: Friday Night Lights

Friday, Jan. 7, 7 p.m.
Messa Rink at Achilles CenterMen's hockey vs. Vermont

Friday, Jan. 7, 8
p.m.

Viniar Athletic
Center
Union Invitational: Men's basketball vs. St. Joseph's
(Vt.)
(Consolation game Saturday, Jan. 8, 1 p.m.; championship at 3 p.m.)

Friday, Jan, 7, 10
p.m.

Old Chapel
Magic and comedy show with Spike & Hammer
To find out more: http://www.spikeandhammer.com/about.html

Saturday, Jan. 8, 7 p.m.
Messa Rink at Achilles Center
Men's hockey vs. Dartmouth

Sunday, Jan. 9, 3 p.m.
Memorial Chapel
Union College Chamber Series presents Trio
Mediaeval

Wednesday, Jan. 12, 3:30 p.m.
Orange House
Dedication and tours.

Thursday, Jan. 13, 5
to 7 p.m.

Dyson Hall, the Nott Memorial
Opening reception for exhibit on effects of drunk driving: “Friends — One
Day. One Wrong Turn.”

Thursday, Jan. 13, 7
p.m.

Memorial Chapel
Performing arts concert series
presents the Korean Traditional Performing Arts Association, a nine-member ensemble from New York City performing traditional Korean music and dance.

Thursday, Jan. 13, 7
p.m.

Pool, Alumni Gymnasium
Men's and women's swimming vs. Williams

Friday, Jan. 14, 6
p.m.

Viniar Athletic
Center
Women's basketball vs. Rensselaer

Friday, Jan. 14, 7 p.m.
Messa Rink at Achilles Center
Men's hockey vs. Cornell

Friday, Jan. 14, 8
p.m.

Viniar Athletic
Center
Men's basketball vs. Rensselaer

Friday, Jan. 14, through Monday, Jan. 17, 8 and 10 p.m.

Reamer Campus Center
Auditorium
Movie: The Forgotten

Saturday, Jan. 15, 2
p.m.

Viniar Athletic Center

Women's basketball vs. Vassar (dedication of Viniar Athletic
Center after game)

Saturday, Jan. 15, 4
p.m.

Viniar Athletic Center
Men's basketball vs. Vassar (dedication of Viniar Athletic Center before
game)

Saturday, Jan. 15, 7 p.m.
Messa Rink at Achilles Center
Men's hockey vs. Colgate

Saturday, Jan. 15, 9 p.m.
Old Chapel
Psychic Fair

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Show gives a look at Tasmania

Posted on Jan 7, 2005

Kyla Rudnick at the Pennyroyal cattle ranch, Tasmania

Visitors to the second-floor
Social Sciences Gallery can get a feel for Tasmania, through the eyes of students and
faculty who did a field study term abroad there last winter.

Photographs from the anthropology
term will be on display through March 18.

After about 10 days traveling
through New South Wales and Victoria,
the group made the 15-hour ferry crossing of the Bass Straits from Melbourne to Tasmania.
Soon after, each student moved into the home of a Tasmanian family in
communities near the capital of Hobart.

During the term, students learned
anthropological research techniques while studying the ecology and culture of Tasmania. Each student
also carried out an independent research project with topics ranging from the
political controversy over aboriginal history to artists who have chosen an
alternative lifestyle known as “voluntary downward mobility.”

Students were Chris Berk, Mike Carey, Rose Chowallur,
Morgan Gmelch, Cara Kantrowitz, Andrew McCord, Chris
Neal, Mike Pascucci, Kaitlyn
Richards, Kyla Rudnick and Sarah Tidman.
The term was co-directed by George Gmelch and Sharon Gmelch, with the
assistance of fellow anthropologist Richard K. Nelson.

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