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Brain researcher comes back to Union

Posted on Feb 17, 2005

Recipient of honorary degree lauds liberal arts grounding he got there


   Thirty-three years after last seeing the Union College campus as an honored psychology graduate, Ted Berger credits the broad based liberal arts education as crucial to the scientific, academic and business teamwork that is key to his ground-breaking research into building a “bionic brain.”

MARC SCHULTZ/GAZETTE PHOTOGRAPHER
Theodore W. Berger, of Union College’s Class of 1972, walks with Union President Roger Hull in front of the Nott Memorial on campus Thursday. Berger was awarded an honorary doctorate during Union’s Founders Day convocat

   As head of the Center for Neural Engineering at the University of Southern California since 1997, Berger leads more than 40 scientists and engineers seeking to replace damaged brain parts with computer chip technology.


   During a breakfast Thursday with Capital Region business executives at Union, Berger said the academic world operates in a new environment that requires much closer ties to business and its entrepreneurial spirit.


   Explaining his research in mimicking brain responses to help Alzheimer's or brain-damage victims regain memory functions, Berger said “We really want to reach the real world.”


   Scientific research is a family tradition with Berger. His wife, Roberta Diaz Brinton, a USC professor of molecular pharmacology and toxicology, spoke of the importance of learning business expertise as she researches ways to mimic the hormone estrogen's potential in preventing Alzheimer's disease.


   Berger, 54, was raised in Arlington, near Poughkeepsie, where his father was an electrical engineer with IBM. In the midst of a mini industry of his own, Berger is part owner of Safety Dynamics, a Chicago company making devices that sort specific sounds from background noise, as a human can.


   Already, he said, Chicago police have used them in high-crime areas to pinpoint gunshots from as far as a block away.


   The systems have also been installed by police in Los Angeles and San Francisco, and 400 units have been sold to a security company in Mexico. Homeland Security officials are considering similar sensors in a wireless grid planned for New York City, Berger said.


   The military is also interested in a system to sense the sound of a gun being cocked, and NASA wants voice-controlled equipment to use in the din of the “tin can” atmosphere of the International Space Station.


   But it is Berger's brain-chip research that has been recognized around the globe.


   Aided by about $40 million over 10 years from the National Science Foundation, as well as advice from various industries, the USC team has already connected the neurochip technology to slices of living rat brain, with implantation into a monkey brain planned in seven to eight years. Clinical trials in human brains are expected within 12 to 15 years, Berger said.


   Already armed with a 1976 doctorate from Harvard, Berger received an honorary doctorate in science Thursday during Union ceremonies marking the 210th anniversary of the college's founding in 1795.


   Berger praised U n i o n ' s 5-year-old “Converging Technologies ” program to help students adapt to the increasingly closer relationship with business.


   “What good is a microchip [mimicking brain functions] if it's not approved by the FDA and sold ” to help patients, Berger said.


   Union President Roger Hull called Berger “the personification of what we're attempting to do.”

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Dutchwomen Swimmers Bid for State Title This Weekend

Posted on Feb 16, 2005

The Dutchwomen swimmers have put together a solid year under
head coach Scott Felix and will look to end their season with a top-three
finish in the state event while trying to qualify a few individuals for the
NCAA championship. 

 

“I really think that the team is focused on the state meet,”
said Felix.  “In fact, this is the most
focused I've seen them since I was named head coach and I'm anxious for us to
get to Syracuse.”

 

Winning the title will take an entire team effort with some
outstanding individual performances. 
LeMoyne, Ithaca, Nazareth,
Rensselaer and Vassar are the teams that Felix sees
standing in the way of Union's bid to bring home the
title.

 

Please click below for daily updates
(which begin Thursday afternoon)

 

http://www.lemoyne.edu/athletics/swimming/championship.asp

 

“Our diving crew of Sarah Steuer, Molly
Freeman, Tara Campbell and Jamie Dughi will be our biggest asset,” Felix
explained.  “But to win the title it is
going take our entire team stepping up and going faster than they have ever
gone.

 

“We will be looking for leadership out of Chrissie Duff,
Brianne Phillips and Sydnie Wells and freshmen Christa White and Ashley
Braniecki will have to step up for us in their events.  I believe the team is capable of winning the
championship if they want.”

 

Whatever happens at the state meet the Dutchwomen have made
a great deal of progress this year.  Not
only did the Garnet break a 20-meet winless streak, they finished with a
regular-season record of 3-6 and performed well at the Liberty League
championship meet. Individually, Wells and Duff were each named the Liberty
League's “Swimmer of the Week” during the season, Steuer was the “Diver of the
Week” and White captured a pair of “Rookie of the Week” awards. Steuer and
Freeman each made the standard in qualifying for the NCAA meet.  They are awaiting a decision from a panel of
judges (who view videos of all the divers) and if they are in the top 22, they
will have qualified for the national event.

 

“We turned things around and are headed in the right
direction,” said Felix.

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This is a BIG Weekend for Union’s Winter Teams

Posted on Feb 16, 2005

The women's swim team is off to Nottingham High School in
Syracuse for the three-day New York State Women's Collegiate Athletic
Association championship, the men's and women's basketball teams go into the
regular-season finale looking to secure their spot in the upcoming four-team
Liberty League championship tournament, the men's hockey team looks to get back
on track in an effort to host an opening-round series in the upcoming ECAC
championship tournament and the women's hockey team is hoping to break into the
ECAC win column at Messa Rink before the regular-season ends next weekend at
Princeton.

 

DUTCHWOMEN
SWIMMERS LOOK TO TOP A SOLID YEAR

 

The Dutchwomen swimmers have put together a solid year under
head coach Scott Felix and will look to end their season with a top-three
finish in the state event while trying to qualify a few individuals for the
NCAA championship. 

 

“I really think that the team is focused on the state meet,”
said Felix.  “In fact, this is the most
focused I've seen them since I was named head coach and I'm anxious for us to
get to Syracuse.”

 

Winning the title will take an entire team effort with some
outstanding individual performances. 
LeMoyne, Ithaca, Nazareth,
Rensselaer and Vassar are the teams that Felix sees
standing in the way of Union's bid to bring home the
title.

 

Please click below for daily updates
(which begin Thursday afternoon)

 

http://www.lemoyne.edu/athletics/swimming/championship.asp

 

“Our diving crew of Sarah Steuer, Molly
Freeman, Tara Campbell and Jamie Dughi will be our biggest asset,” Felix
explained.  “But to win the title it is
going take our entire team stepping up and going faster than they have ever
gone.

 

“We will be looking for leadership out of Chrissie Duff,
Brianne Phillips and Sydnie Wells and freshmen Christa White and Ashley
Braniecki will have to step up for us in their events.  I believe the team is capable of winning the
championship if they want.”

 

Whatever happens at the state meet the Dutchwomen have made
a great deal of progress this year.  Not
only did the Garnet break a 20-meet winless streak, they finished with a
regular-season record of 3-6 and performed well at the Liberty League
championship meet. Individually, Wells and Duff were each named the Liberty
League's “Swimmer of the Week” during the season, Steuer was the “Diver of the
Week” and White captured a pair of “Rookie of the Week” awards. Steuer and
Freeman each made the standard in qualifying for the NCAA meet.  They are awaiting a decision from a panel of
judges (who view videos of all the divers) and if they are in the top 22, they
will have qualified for the national event.

 

“We turned things around and are headed in the right
direction,” said Felix.

 

 

 

BASKETBALL TEAMS
NEED TO WIN AND HOPE

 

Both the men's and women's basketball teams find themselves
in the situation of “win and hope for the best” as neither can control their
own destiny.  The defending champion
Dutchwomen are already in the tournament but need some help if they are going
to enjoy the home court advantage.  The
Dutchmen go into the week as the fifth-place team as they look to qualify for next
weekend's four-team championship tournament.

 

Union, St. Lawrence, Rensselaer
and William Smith head into the weekend all tied at 9-3.  The Dutchwomen, who have already beaten St.
Lawrence, host the Saints on Friday night and play 1-11 Clarkson on Saturday
afternoon.  Union
split its two games with Rensselaer (which is at William
Smith and at 7-5 Hamilton) but lost
both games to the Herons.  Union
did beat fifth-place Hamilton
twice.  The weekend's other key game has
2-10 Skidmore hosting St. Lawrence
on Saturday.

 

In their first meeting with St. Lawrence the Dutchwomen came
from 13 points down to score the winning basket with one second left in a 57-55
victory.   Senior forward Katlyn Cunningham scored 18 points down the stretch with
junior guard Erika Eisenhut hitting the final basket.

 

 

2004-05
 Basketball (W)

 

Liberty League
Only

 

Overall

 

W

L

Win %

GP

PF

PA

 

W

L

Win %

GP

PF

PA

1

 St. Lawrence

 

9

3

.750

12

715

583

 

13

8

.619

21

1220

1100

 

 Rensselaer

 

9

3

.750

12

761

652

 

12

10

.545

22

1441

1305

 

 William Smith

 

9

3

.750

12

712

589

 

14

7

.667

21

1245

1122

 

 Union

 

9

3

.750

12

716

596

 

16

6

.727

22

1345

1161

5

 Hamilton

 

7

5

.583

12

709

654

 

13

9

.591

22

1401

1302

6

 Skidmore

 

2

10

.167

12

501

711

 

8

15

.348

23

1031

1253

 

 Vassar

 

2

10

.167

12

518

698

 

6

16

.273

22

1049

1319

8

 Clarkson

 

1

11

.083

12

546

695

 

4

19

.174

23

1101

1328

 

 Friday, February 18

6:00 pm

C

Clarkson

 

at

Skidmore

 

 

 

6:00 pm

C

Rensselaer

 

at

William Smith

 

 

 

6:00 pm

C

St. Lawrence

 

at

Union

 

 

 

6:00 pm

C

Vassar

 

at

Hamilton

 

 

 

 Saturday, February 19

2:00 pm

C

St. Lawrence

 

at

Skidmore

 

 

 

2:00 pm

C

Vassar

 

at

William Smith

 

 

 

2:00 pm

C

Rensselaer

 

at

Hamilton

 

 

 

6:00 pm

C

Clarkson

 

at

Union

 

 

 

 

 

The Dutchmen go into the final two games tied with Rensselaer
at 6-6.  The Garnet's biggest problem is
that they dropped both games to the Red Hawks, who kept Union
out of last year's tournament by beating the Dutchmen in the regular-season
finale.  The Dutchmen split with both
second-place Skidmore and third-place Hamilton
but lost both games to league-leading Hobart.

 

The Dutchmen already own victories over St. Lawrence (Friday
night's opponent) and Clarkson and need a weekend sweep to remain in the
playoff hunt.  The scoreboard watching
that Union is most interested in will feature Rensselaer's
showdowns at Hobart and Hamilton.

 

2004-05
 Basketball (M)

 

Liberty League
Only

 

Overall

 

W

L

Win %

GP

PF

PA

 

W

L

Win %

GP

PF

PA

1

 Hobart

 

9

3

.750

12

907

823

 

14

8

.636

22

1636

1577

2

 Skidmore

 

8

4

.667

12

850

812

 

14

7

.667

21

1523

1405

3

 Hamilton

 

7

5

.583

12

902

837

 

12

10

.545

22

1626

1518

4

 Rensselaer

 

6

6

.500

12

788

775

 

13

10

.565

23

1539

1487

 

 Union

 

6

6

.500

12

831

830

 

12

11

.522

23

1571

1557

6

 Vassar

 

5

7

.417

12

730

768

 

12

10

.545

22

1480

1445

7

 St. Lawrence

 

4

8

.333

12

829

902

 

6

17

.261

23

1603

1746

8

 Clarkson

 

3

9

.250

12

682

772

 

7

16

.304

23

1405

1590

 

 

 Friday, February 18

8:00 pm

C

Clarkson

 

at

Skidmore

 

 

 

8:00 pm

C

Rensselaer

 

at

Hobart

 

 

 

8:00 pm

C

St. Lawrence

 

at

Union

 

 

 

8:00 pm

C

Vassar

 

at

Hamilton

 

 

 

 Saturday, February 19

4:00 pm

C

St. Lawrence

 

at

Skidmore

 

 

 

4:00 pm

C

Vassar

 

at

Hobart

 

 

 

4:00 pm

C

Clarkson

 

at

Union

 

 

 

4:00 pm

C

Rensselaer

 

at

Hamilton

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

DUTCHMEN SKATERS
LOOKING FOR BIG FINISH

 

The Dutchmen enter the second-to-last weekend of the
regular-season one point out of eighth place, the final spot in which a team
needs to finish in order to host an opening-round game.  Union, which has
hosted Clarkson and Rensselaer, respectively, the last
two seasons, opened the 2004-05 campaign by winning its first six ECAC
games.  It marked the first time in the
14-year history of their Division I status that the Dutchmen led the league.

 

 

As for the Dutchwomen, they have four chances to match or better last year's ECAC record of 1-17-0, which was their first season as a Division I team. The 0-16-0 Garnet travel to face 3-14-1 Cornell this weekend before closing the season at home next weekend against 7-5-3 Princeton.

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City now an asset for Union College

Posted on Feb 16, 2005

Admissions dean: region no longer turns off students


Prospective Union College students aren't complaining about Schenectady any more. After 14 years on the job, Admissions Director Dan Lundquist said being in the Capital Region has gone from being a liability to an asset.


“The Capital District has changed an awful lot in the past 10 to 15 years. When I first came here, you couldn't buy an avocado in the supermarket,” Lundquist said. “And I don't want to sound like the Tech Valley chamber of commerce, but with the upgrade in the airport, and now we've got Borders, Barnes and Noble, multiplexes, and a Thai restaurant.”


This year, Lundquist announced that Union College has hit an all-time high in applications, with 4,300 received so far, an increase of more than 100 over the previous high. When Lundquist was hired in 1990, 2,800 students applied to Union. (The college generally admits three times as many students as it expects to enroll, a ratio that has remained stable over time, Lundquist said.) In making the announcement, Lundquist attributed the rise to a combination of factors, including the college's new Minerva House System, the popularity of terms abroad, and its undergraduate research program. But he also noted that the Capital Region itself has become a selling point.


REASON TO REJECT


For over a decade, the college has polled applicants who turned down an acceptance letter from Union, asking the students why they decided to go elsewhere. And for years, the number one answer was Schenectady.


That is no longer the case.


Schenectady was also among the top three reasons students gave for transferring elsewhere; the other two being a lack of social diversity and lack of academic challenge. This too has changed.


Union junior Joanna Stern, who took issue with Lundquist's announcement in a recent editorial in the Concordiensis, the college newspaper, said she is pleased the college is gaining popularity, but she doubts Lundquist's explanation.


“I definitely thought it was a positive thing the spike in admissions,” Stern said. I just didn't think the reasons he was giving for the increase hold water here on campus.” In a telephone interview, Stern said Schenectady is still a liability in many ways. “There's news here every week of another robbery on campus, they don't want kids living off campus because of break-ins, these aren't selling points for the school,” Stern said. “As a junior, I can say that Schenectady would be a huge factor if I were just applying.”


Stern also questioned the oncampus opportunities Lundquist listed. Many students apply to Union expecting to spend a term abroad, only to find that they are wait-listed or never go thanks to cutbacks. The Minerva House system is just getting under way, and while it shows promise, Stern said it has yet to become a significant social factor. Lundquist said he is drawing his conclusions from the comments of applicants to the college.


ACADEMICS, PRESTIGE


With Schenectady no longer an issue, Union students are comparing the college to competitors based on academics and prestige, Lundquist said. Students who choose Union cite challenging academics, while those who turn it down go to a school they think will be more challenging.


“Negative comments about Schenectady were a pervasive theme for quite a while in the reasons why people would not come to Union or why they would leave after they came,” Lundquist said. “That is changing.”


Lundquist said Union is gaining a reputation among its clientele having good access to the internship and research opportunities that have grown in the Capital Region. He named Super Power and CardioMag Imaging, two hightech companies with Schenectady facilities, as willing venues for Union interns.


“For our students to work as an aide for the state or hop over to Michigan Ave. and be an intern at Super Power or CardioMag . . . these days the internship piece is pretty big,” Lundquist said.


“From an admissions points of view it's interesting to see a former negative recede and become a positive,” Lundquist said.


Lundquist said the proof – in the form of higher applications numbers and survey results – is confirmation of a suspicion that has been growing in his mind for the past two years. “I suspected it because as I travel around the U.S and as I see record numbers of visitors coming to campus, the comments were changing,” Lundquist said. “People would say, 'wow, this place is great,' or 'Schenectady is better than I thought it was.' I wanted to smile and cringe at the same time.”


 


 


 


 

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U.S. intelligence expert Melvin Goodman speaks at Union

Posted on Feb 15, 2005

Schenectady, N.Y. (Feb. 15, 2005) – Melvin Goodman, co-author of “Bush League Diplomacy: How the Neoconservatives
Are Putting the World at Risk,” and former CIA analyst, will speak on “What
is Intelligence?” at Union College on Tuesday, Feb. 22, at 4:30 p.m. in the Social Sciences Building, Room 103.

This event is sponsored by the College's political
science department. It is free and open to the public.

Currently, Goodman teaches at several Washington, D.C. colleges, is a professor at the Pentagon's National War College and acts as director of the Intelligence Reform Project at the Center for International
Policy.

For more information, please contact Professor Lobe
of the Union College political science department at 388-6224.

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