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Tech Valley Engineering Symposium at Union

Posted on Apr 11, 2005

The room was abuzz with flickering gadgets and gossip laden with technology jargon, such as “infrared thermography” and “photovoltaic systems.”


Amid the crowd of professional engineers and college students flanking poster-board presentations at Union College's first annual Tech Valley Engineering Symposium, Mike Harty looked a bit out of place. 


Harty stuck out not because he was one of only two high-school seniors presenting studies at the College Hall Park complex off Nott Street. Not because he wore a suit and tie while many of the Union engineering students were clad in T-shirts and sandals. The 18-year-old Columbia High School student on Tuesday presented one of the few studies at the symposium that was not exactly related to engineering.
   


Harty worked seven hours every day last summer with an Albany College of Pharmacy professor studying how two drugs, ursolic acid and Taxol, prevented blood clots that can cause heart attacks. 


The East Greenbush student wanted to spend his summer researching something more related to his field of interest, chemical engineering, but he was unable to find a university professor willing to serve as a mentor for him. The drug testing was similar enough to chemical engineering to keep him happy. “I have no regrets. I loved everything I was doing,” said Harty.



But Harty's science research teacher, Cindy Taylor, wishes it were easier for her students to find engineering mentors. One of the reasons she believes so few of her students are interested in engineering is because their ability to get real world experience in the field is limited.



“In engineering, it's much harder to get anyone to talk to you. They think 'high school student' and don't want anything to do with you,” said Taylor.


The 20-year veteran teacher has seen interest in engineering wane, as only eight of her 38 advanced science students want to pursue careers in that field. The rest want to be medical doctors or researchers and can easily enroll in internships at Albany Medical Center.


“Maybe some kids don't like doing math. It's as simple as that,” said Brendan Johnson, a Columbia High School junior who wants to be a computer engineer. He was one of six students in Taylor's science class attending the engineering symposium.


However, engineering scholars and professionals say the fight to keep youths interested in their field starts long before high school. It is a struggle for tomorrow's brightest engineers and one that the United States appears to be losing on the global scale.


The National Science Board in April 2004 reported a “troubling decline ” in the number of U.S. citizens pursuing engineering and science careers. A month later the U.S. Department of Education said more than half of the country's high school seniors are not taking any science courses.


A year after the federal board raised the alarm about a pending engineering shortage, upstate New York industry representatives say they are not seeing widespread gaps in the science and technology work force.


“We don't have a problem in finding people to work here,” said James Healy, a spokesman for the General Electric Global Research Center in Niskayuna.


The GE research and development plant employs 1,400 technicians, scientists, researchers and engineers, with about half of them holding doctorates. Despite GE's ease in finding qualified engineers in a global pool of candidates, the potential work force shortage does have the company worried. “It's not something you ignore,” said Healy.


With more than half of the country's science and engineering degree holders 40 or older, gaps in the work force may expand greatly in about 15 years because of retirements. However, in the last 20 years, the country has gone from being the third-leading producer of natural science and engineering degrees to the 17 th in the world.


“That's a daunting statistic. If we don't wake up, we're going to be in big trouble,” said Union College Dean of Engineering and Computer Science Robert Balmer.
COMPETING COUNTRIES


Several Asian countries, including China, South Korea and Japan in 2001 produced almost double the amount of engineering degrees awarded in the United States. More engineering competition is coming from the European Union, non-U.S. G-7 countries, and non-U.S. Organization for Economic Corporation and Development nations, according to the National Science Board.


“Although the United States remains the world's leading [science and technology] leader, a collection of trends in indicators of U.S. S &T competitiveness paints a more different picture,” the NSB said in its Science and Engineering Indicators 2004 report.


In 2000, 2.8 million of the 7.8 million degrees awarded in the United States were in science and engineering fields, according to the NSB report.


At Union, 15 students graduated with mechanical engineering degrees. That is little more than half the 28 degrees issued in 1974 and is a far cry from the 85 awarded in 1984, a spike seen throughout the country in the 1980s. “Clearly, we need to motivate people into technology fields,” said Balmer.



On October 4, 1957, the Soviet Union sent the world's first artificial satellite into space, launching a rush for engineering degrees in the United States. Balmer said he hopes the Capital Region's Tech Valley initiative will be able to produce a degree of engineering enthusiasm like that seen during the space race.
COURTING STUDENTS


One strategy Union and area technology companies have employed to cultivate future generations of engineers is to host science programs mostly geared toward elementary-school students.


On April 30, Union will bring 22 Capital Region schools to campus for the annual Rube Goldberg Machine Contest, where students will test machines they made designed to open soda bottles.


Looking to prevent elementary school students from being dissuaded from engineering pursuits, General Electric also hosts science programs for children. In November it will again bring about 400 Capital Region fourth graders to its Niskayuna plant.


“It's not to encourage more into [engineering fields]. It's to make sure the ones who are interested don't get dissuaded, because we need fresh talent,” said Ronald Bucinell, a Union mechanical engineering associate professor.


Bucinell challenged the assumption that the United States should be the world's leading producer of engineers. Emerging industrial nations, such as China, produce more engineers than the United States because they need more, he said.


“We don't need to produce more engineers. We need to produce good engineers,” Bucinell said. Nevertheless, he noted that the college's mechanical engineering department has doubled over the last four years to 180 students.


However, China also produces more engineers to be more competitive with technology markets in the United States. The drive to unseat the United States from its engineering pre-eminence is already apparent in the country's waning automotive industry, which is “squirming” under foreign pressure, said Balmer.


MORE NEEDED
And it will take a lot more than annual science fair programs to maintain the United States' leading role in technology fields, said Dan Gentile, executive director of the Capital Region Workforce Investment Board. Some European and Asian countries have adopted policies to become leaders in the global technology market and to produce more engineers.


“We don't have a policy that says we need engineers, so let's go out and create them. We have a hands-off policy,” said Gentile.


Despite the lack of federal and state policy supporting the production of engineers, the NSB said the United States has maintained its “scientific and technological edge” through decades of investment in research and development fields.


New York ranks second in college and university investments in research and development projects. The state's higher education institutes last year set a research and development investment record of $2.77 billion. That was an 11 percent increase from 2001's record investment of $2.48 billion, according to the New York State Office of Science, Technology and Academic Research.
Over 400,000 scientists and engineers live in New York. The state ranks second nationwide in producing electrical engineers and third in mechanical engineers, according to Empire State Development.


CALL FOR ACTION
Nevertheless, Gentile questions whether the Capital Region, even with all its technology colleges and universities, will be able to produce and maintain an adequate amount of engineers for the future.


“If action is not taken to change these trends,” the NSB said, “we could reach 2020 and find that the ability of U.S. research and education institutions to regenerate has been damaged and that their preeminence has been lost to other areas in the world.”


Gentile said neither New York nor the United States should adopt policies that steer young children into engineering fields. He emphasized the need “to do a very good job of telling them what their options are.”


 


 

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Bioethics conference at Union

Posted on Apr 11, 2005

At a Saturday conference on bioethics at Union College, international leaders in the field shared the kinds of conundrums they face, leading some to suggest they would benefit from having a code of conduct.


Robert Baker, director of the Center for Bioethics and Clinical Leadership at Union, offered this example: A pharmaceutical company discovers in the middle of a patient trial that the new drug will cost five times more than expected. Do the trials continue?


Peter Whitehouse, from Case Western Reserve University in Ohio, had a second: Should a practicing physician who makes a healthy second income speaking at pharmaceutical company functions disclose his or her relationship with the drug firm, and if so, should the amount of money being accepted be revealed?


Such were the discussions in the main conference room and in the halls of a Union College conference center as the college, along with Albany Medical College, sponsored the first American conference to address not just the issues of bioethics, but the ethics of the ethicists themselves. The conference, attended by about 90 medical and ethical professionals, began Thursday night at the medical college and continued through Saturday afternoon in Schenectady.


Bioethics is the “discipline dealing with the ethical implications of biological research and applications especially in medicine,” according to Merriam-Webster Dictionary.


The ethical quandaries of medicine have journeyed far from questions related to hospital treatments and diagnosis, Baker said.


“The doctors would grab me and ask me for advice,” Baker said of his early ethicist days in the 1970s. “They were desperate to talk to somebody” about issues like when to remove feeding tubes.


“We rushed in and got involved, and made up the rules as we went along,” Baker said.


This weekend, the discussion revolved around pharmaceuticals and the possibility of creating a code for ethicists.


Offering the drug trials as example, Baker said the answer was clear: Yes, the trials continue because the companies have a responsibility to patients and medical science to finish what they began. Plus, the study could pave the way for finding a cheaper drug.


In his Saturday afternoon talk, he noted that Canada already has a code of ethics for bioethicists.


As with all philosophical discussions, there were dissenters.


“Bioethics ought not to be a profession,” Whitehouse said. “The world would be a better place if everyone thought of themselves as a bioethicist.”


The Schenectady-Albany conference begins a conversation that Baker said will continue in the fall, at the national gathering of the American Society of Bioethics and Humanities.


 

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“Visions and Revisions: Recycled and Environmental Art”

Posted on Apr 11, 2005

Environmental and recycled art exhibit on display at Union College

'Visions and Revisions: Recycled and Environmental Art'

The Environmental Club of Union will host “Visions and Revisions: Recycled and Environmental Art.” The exhibition contains environmentally themed artistic works in celebration of Earth Day.  The show will take place in Union College's Wikoff Student Gallery, located on the third floor of the Nott Memorial running from Monday, April 11 until Sunday, May 29.  The exhibit's opening reception will be Tuesday, April 19, at 4:30 p.m.


This exhibit will feature over 25 works inspired in form and content by the environment and/or environmental consciousness.  These works include sculpture, painting, photography, collage, and other mixed media works.  The primary focus of the show will be works built from recycled materials. 


The event is being organized to bring together the Union College community in a greater understanding of the value of the environment and to encourage thought on the effects of wastefulness.  There will be entries by students, members of the local community, and Union College alumni.  Works featured in the show will be for sale.


 


 

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Dr. Ronald Weinstein ’60 receives Arizona Physician of the Year award

Posted on Apr 8, 2005

By Troy Acevedo, Arizona Daily Wildcat


The National Republican Congressional Committee in Washington, D.C., honored two professors in the College of Medicine with Arizona's Physician of the Year award.


Dr. Ronald Weinstein, professor and chair of the Pathology department at the UA College of Medicine, and Dr. Anna Graham, professor of Pathology at the College of Medicine, received the awards for their extensive work in Arizona health care and services.

Dr. Ron Weinstein '60
photo from the Arizona Daily Wildcat

Weinstein, who earned his bachelor of science degree from Union College, his medical degree from Tufts Medical School and pathology training at Massachusetts General and Harvard University, said he was honored to have recognition associated with Arizona.


“I am delighted to receive this award but am especially delighted that the award says it is from Arizona,” Weinstein said. “We have an incredible pool of talent here in Arizona, and it is a delight that the governor and legislature is looking at the biomedical industry.”


In addition to his work in telemedicine, Weinstein is also considered the inventor of robotic telepathology and the array microscope developed in cooperation with the UA Optical Science Center.


One of Weinstein's accomplishments has been the Arizona Telemedicine Program at University Medical Center, which is one of the premier telemedicine programs in the country and was founded in 1996 through the efforts of Weinstein and Sen. Robert Burns, R-Ariz.


“We like to be creators and not feel confined by a traditional academic job description,” Weinstein said. “This award is a tribute to the university, and it is wonderful how the UA encourages that.”


Graham, professor of pathology at the College of Medicine and proud UA alumna, said she was happy to say she received all of her education in Arizona, most of which was at the UA.


Graham's area of expertise is orthopedic pathology, and she has also published research on cardiac transplantation pathology.


“I'm excited, because what we have done here has in a way help sensitize towards patients needs,” Graham said. “It is wonderful to be able to provide the highest quality care, while at the same time, saving the state some much-needed funding.”


Graham was also the president of the Arizona State Pathological Society, Treasurer of the Arizona State Medical Association and a retired delegate from the American Medical Association.


Both Graham and Weinstein are holders of the distinguished lifetime teaching award for the College of Medicine, of which only five have ever been awarded.


 

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Union banner flies above fold on front page of USA Today

Posted on Apr 8, 2005

Cover of USA Today

A Union College banner flew prominently on the front page of the April 7 edition of USA Today. The banner was one of seven in a photo accompanying a story on CEOs who graduated from non-Ivy League colleges.


A chart that is linked to the article cites Texas Instruments' CEO Richard Templeton, who graduated from Union in 1980.


The article is at http://www.usatoday.com/money/companies/management/2005-04-06-cover-ceos_x.htm.


 

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