Union College News Archives

News story archive

Navigation Menu

Walter Hatke show opens, to run through March 13

Posted on Jan 21, 2005

“Hidden Words” by Walter Hatke


Walter Hatke, May I. Baker Professor of Fine Arts, will give a gallery talk at the opening reception for an exhibit of his works on Thursday, Jan. 20, from 5 to 7 p.m. at the Nott Memorial's Mandeville Gallery.


Hatke teaches drawing and painting at Union. The exhibition consists of paintings, drawings, and prints completed between 2000 and 2005.


“Walter Hatke: Recent Work” runs through March 13.


“Open” by Walter Hatke


Hatke, who has taught at Union since 1986, earned his bachelor's degree from DePauw University, and his master's and MFA degrees from the University of Iowa. His works have appeared recently in the John Pence Gallery, San Francisco; Gerald Peters Gallery in Santa Fe; and at MB Modern Gallery in New York.


The following poem by Jordan Smith, professor of English, was inspired by Hatke's “Open.” It appears in “A Sketchbook for Walter Hatke” that accompanies the show.


The door to the pew is open, as if a congregant had just
Left a moment ago, slipping quietly outside, as if the sermon
Came a little too close to home, or prayer seemed simpler somewhere
Else, a cigarette sheltered in one hand, out there among the trees,
Where smoke might rise in praise of breath's dispersal into
A fine sky, where someone unexpected might be listening. Still,
The door is open, the emptiness welcoming, and the wood's
Grain is another kind of meaning that has lasted a long time
Despite the rectitude of the white paint, this record of what living
Leaves behind: the fine whorls of the world always, almost
Just gone, and so without end, amen. </I<

Read More

Faculty to meet with presidential search chair

Posted on Jan 21, 2005

The Faculty Executive Council has
set a faculty meeting with Frank Messa '73, trustee and chair of the
presidential search committee, for Friday, Jan. 21, from 1:15 to 2:15 p.m. in
Reamer Campus Center Auditorium.

The FEC met last week with Messa,
who immediately agreed to their request to outline the search process and to
solicit faculty views on the qualities and characteristics the committee should
consider, said Cliff Brown, chair of the FEC.

Read More

Prof. Steckler exhibits works in several shows

Posted on Jan 21, 2005

Charles Steckler,
professor of theater, exhibited art works in a group show titled “Shock and
Awe: Some American Art” at the Firlefanz Gallery in Albany last September. The works, portmanteau
dioramas and framed constructions, were more recently shown at the third annual
Cyclics Art and Science Exhibit in Schenectady, and in a two-person show at the
Dietel Gallery at the Emma Willard School in Troy. Steckler, who designed the
stage set for “Metamorphoses” in the Yulman Theater in November, is preparing
for a 35-year retrospective exhibition in the Mandeville Gallery in the Nott
Memorial, scheduled for January 2006.

Read More

Prof. Orzel gives talk at international conference

Posted on Jan 21, 2005

Chad Orzel, assistant professor of physics, gave a talk at the Low
Radioactivity Techniques Workshop (LRT2004) in Sudbury, Ontario,
on Dec. 13. This was an international workshop of people working on
astrophysical detectors and other projects requiring extremely low levels of
radioactivity, with participants from several countries, including the U.S., Canada,
Germany, Italy, Japan
and South Korea.
He was the only speaker from a small liberal arts college; most were from large
research universities or national labs. His talk was on the use of Atom Trap
Trace Analysis for measuring radioactive krypton background levels in other
gases. The work is important for a number of large astrophysical detectors
under construction. More information is available at http://lrt2004.snolab.ca.

Read More

Profs. Butterstein, Smith publish in journal

Posted on Jan 21, 2005

George Butterstein, Florence B. Sherwood Professor of Life
Sciences, and George Smith,
associate professor of biology, along with Gerald Mizejewski from the New York
State Department of Health, have published a 21-page article in Cell Biology International titled
“Review and proposed action of alpha-fetoprotein growth inhibitory peptides as
estrogen and cytoskeleton-associated factors.” Human alpha-fetoprotein has been
used in the clinical laboratory as a tumor and gestational-age-dependent fetal
defect marker and in recent years has been determined to be a growth factor in
both fetal and tumor environments.

Read More