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Union men’s hockey team announces 2005-06 captains

Posted on Sep 29, 2005

Schenectady, NY (September 29, 2005) – Union College men's hockey coach Nate Leaman has announced the selection of team captains for the upcoming 2005-06 season. Senior Scott Seney (Silver Spring, MD) and junior Sean Streich (Kimberley, BC) will serve as co-captains and senior Chris Konnick (Binghamton, NY) was selected as the assistant captain.


“I am honored being named captain of Union this year,” stated Seney. “I expect big things out of these guys this year. I'm proud that I get the chance to lead them on the ice.” Seney is no stranger to leading by example on the ice. He has played in 107 of a possible 109 games during his Union career. He has finished in the top five on the team in scoring and has led the team in game-winning goals the past two seasons.  


“Being named a captain is definitely a privilege,” commented Streich. “I feel lucky to have the opportunity to lead this great group of guys. It feels good to be recognized as a leader by the coaches and my teammates. We look forward to having a great season.” Streich has been on the ice for every game as a Dutchmen and was one of just three players to appear in all 37 games last season. He also finished third among defensemen last year in points.


“Being named a captain is a great honor and it will be exciting to help lead the great group of guys we have coming back next year,” acknowledged Konnick. The senior has appeared in 40 games for the Dutchmen.  


Seney and Streich become the 78th and 79th captains in the program's history. The trio leads Union into the 2005-06 season at the Ice Breaker Invitational in Colorado Springs, CO on October 7th against Colorado College.


 

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Audino, Murphy, Ftorek highlight the fall week that was

Posted on Sep 28, 2005

John Audino

John Audino has a captivating smile, and lately, there has been a reason to see a lot of smiles. The Dutchmen are 3-0. They lead the nation in “turnover margin,” thus, they are taking very good care of the football. They have the fourth ranked running back (Tom Arcidiacono) and fourth ranked wide receiver (Steve Angiletta) in NCAA Division III numbers-wise. They are receiving votes in both of the national polls (AFCA and D3football.com). And, yet, the focus of the coach, as always, is on his staff and his team at all times, and the big picture at hand.


“John Audino already was the all-time winningest coach here at Union,” said Associate Head Coach Gary Reynolds. “He added the milestone of 100 victories with little self attention, but rather by being concerned about our players' accomplishments vs. Rochester and getting ready for the next opponent, Merchant Marine.


“John is more interested in THIS 2005 team and what it will accomplish on and off the field then his personal record. He understands that if the players and program are handled correctly, the personal accolades will continue to occur.”

John Audino

Tom Arcidiacono (Castleton, NY/Columbia) rushed for a career-best 250 yards on 38 carries and scored three touchdowns to lead Union to the 41-28 win at Rochester Saturday. Arcidiacono's total of 250 tied Kojo Attah's mark for the fourth most rushing yards in Union history, and it was the most since George Beebe's school record 272 vs. Rochester in November of 2000. Arcidiacono had rushing TDs of six, one and 17 yards in the victory. Steve Angiletta (Plantsville, CT/Southington) had eight catches for 160 yards and a 65-yard touchdown reception. QB Anthony Marotti (River Edge, NJ/River Dell) was 16 for 29 for 164 yards and two touchdowns. Marotti now has 97 pass attempts on the season without an interception. Remarkably, his team has now played 13 quarters and 195 minutes, 42 seconds since his last interception, in the third quarter of the “Shoes Game” vs. Rensselaer in the '04 season finale.


Audino enters this week with a Union career record of 100-33-0, good for a winning mark of 75.2%. He has never had a sub-.500 season and is in his 14th year.

Arcidiacono is averaging 192.3 yards per game to rank #4 in NCAA Division III, while Angiletta is #4 with 146.0 receiving yards per game. That, folks, is a balanced offense on a team that would put a smile on any coach, especially one with 100 career victories.

Kristin Murphy

Even though the football team was away, smiles abounded nonetheless around Bailey Field over the weekend. Another stadium tenant, the Union field hockey team, posted back-to-back Liberty League home wins Friday and Saturday. You might say, after a brief losing streak, that it was “Murphy's Law” to have a big weekend. So, it was only fitting that senior forward Kristin Murphy (Branford, CT/Branford) would come through to win the Liberty League Offensive Performer of the Week.


She opened the week with a goal at Utica. On Friday, she scored four goals in a 5-3 home win over league rival Hamilton. Saturday, against St. Lawrence, Murphy scored a goal and an assist in the 4-3 triumph. On the season, the senior has eight goals and two assists for Union.


“Kristin did a marvelous job for us,” commented Head Coach Lacey French. “Her Friday performance really set the tone for a big weekend, and we hope to continue this fine play as we head into a challenging stretch of road games.”


Beginning September 28, the Dutchwomen play five straight on the road before closing out the regular season with five straight at home. They do not return to the Bailey Field turf until October 14.


Like the ball on the turf, the Union men's soccer team just keeps rolling along. Undefeated in the last eight games since the season opening loss, the Dutchmen are 6-1-1 and now 2-0 in the league. Sophomore forward Casey Ftorek (Bedford, MA/Taft School) played no small part in the success of the week. He notched two goals on four shots on goal for Union in a pair of Liberty League weekend opening matches. In the first game, Ftorek scored the game-winning goal at Rensselaer to lead the Dutchmen to a 1-0 win. Saturday at Vassar, Ftorek scored the first Union goal en route to a 2-1 win. He now has a goal in each of his last three games.

Casey Ftorek

“Casey had a great first weekend in the league,” said Head Coach Jeff Guinn. “His goal vs. RPI was a great individual effort, holding off a couple of defenders while slotting the ball by the keeper. His work rate defensively was great, and it is infectious to those around him.


“The goal vs. Vassar was an uncommon header, but a well timed run off of Chris Poey's service into the box. Casey is a tremendous talent who seems to be enjoying the tight knit friendships we have on our team.”

After the September 28 home night game against the Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts, the men's soccer squad will play at Plattsburgh Saturday night.


It was nice for the Union women's volleyball team to be in the friendly confines of the Viniar Atheltic Center. Over the last five event dates, the team has been home for four of those dates. And, the second Union Invite will take place October 7-8. The Dutchwomen will try to improve on the three wins thus far as they head to Oneonta for a tournament this weekend. Senior Charelle Carter (Schenectady, NY/ND-BG) is averaging a team-best 2.64 kills per game, and freshman Erin Schumaker (Saratoga Springs, NY/Saratoga Springs) has been a force at the net, with 30 solo blocks and 63 total blocks in her first season at Union.


You could think of…oh…at least a dozen reasons why the Union women's soccer team should be nationally ranked. So, for the second straight week, the Dutchwomen stand #12 in the NSCAA/adidas NCAA Division III poll. Union is one of 11 teams in the top 25 to remain undefeated, and the squad joins their field hockey counterparts for a long look at the road. Starting Saturday night at Steven's Tech, it will be four straight away for Coach Brian Speck's team, which was paced Saturday by Caitlin Cuozzo (Norfolk, MA/King Phillip Regional) and Cassandra Mariani (Boonton, NJ/Morris Catholic) in a home win over Vassar. Union has outscored opponents, 36-7, and has allowed just 14 second half shots in this stunning season.


The women's tennis team notched the third win of the season in the home finale, September 27. An 8-1 triumph over Hartwick featured precision play by senior Jennie Werts (New York, NY/Fieldston School). She was a perfect 6-0, 6-0 winner in #1 singles for her third win of the season, and she joined Jess Meola (Hartsdale, NY/Ardsley) for the tandem's fourth doubles win of the year. Werts also won her first round match at the ITA's at William Smith last weekend, and joined Meola for a doubles victory at that tourney as well. Union is at Rensselaer on October 4 before heading to the Liberty League Championships at Vassar.


Meanwhile, the Liberty League Championships for cross country are this weekend. The Union men's team got back on the course last week after a week off, and Victor Guaiquil (Astoria, NY/Stuyvesant) was the top Union finisher at 70th in the meet at Williams. He clocked at 30:31. The women's squad, also competing at Mt. Greylock High School near the Williams campus, was paced by Akousa Dwumfour (Shrewsbury, MA/Shrewsbury). She took 54th in the field at 21:33, and teammate Jane Wolkowitz (Mendota Hts., MN) was not far off the pace, at 61st with a time of 21:50.

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Chinese political propaganda posters exhibit at Union

Posted on Sep 27, 2005

Union College will host an exhibit of propaganda posters from the People's Republic of China. “The Political Body: Posters from the People's Republic of China in the 1960's and 1970's” runs Oct. 6 through Dec. 18, 2005 in the Nott Memorial's Mandeville Gallery.

Thirty posters, on loan from the University of Westminster Chinese poster Collection, reveal the relationship between representations of the individual human body and the 'body politic' of China during the 60's and 70's.


These posters were created during the period known as “The Cultural Revolution” in China. Graphic images were produced for pure political rhetoric to be translated into visual personifications of masculine and violent aggression during that time.


The exhibition shows how the body is portrayed at different political movements and links idealized human figures to political campaigns from China's Maoist ideology to the beginning of economic and cultural reform.


The artwork shows the transition from purely political representation in which images of everyday life are absent, to a broader depiction which incorporates a more expansive vision of political life, acknowledging aspects of social and cultural behavior as contributing to the political vision of China.


The exhibit's reception and gallery talk will be hosted by Joyce Madancy, associate professor of history at Union College, on Monday, Oct. 24, from 4:30- 6:30 p.m. The Mandeville Gallery, located in the Nott Memorial, is free and open to the public. Gallery hours are Monday through Sunday from 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. For additional information, please call 518-388-6004 or the Mandeville Gallery Offices: 518-388-6729.


Please visit: http://www.union.edu/Gallery/Upcoming.htm


 

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Exhibit: ‘The Terracotta Soldiers of Xian’ shows at Union

Posted on Sep 27, 2005

'Three Horses' – Sidney Gluck

 


An exhibit featuring The Terracotta Soldiers of Xian: Photographs by Sidney J. Gluck” will be on display at Union College's Dyson Hall, in the Nott Memorial. It will run through October 30, 2005.


Gluck presents images of the magnificent life-sized terracotta soldiers and horses unearthed at Xian in the 1970s. The huge army was created by the First Emperor of China to immortalize the military might of the First Dynasty and serve the Emperor in his afterlife.  


These photographs were taken in 1997 at Xi'an, China with government permission and assistance.


As an artist, Gluck has used a variety of mediums; painting, photography, and fabric design. He has shown at various galleries and educational institutions throughout New York and New England.

'Bricks' – Sidney Gluck


The exhibit is free and open to the public every day, year round, during the hours that the Nott Memorial is open: Monday-Sunday daily from 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. For additional information, please call 518-388-6004 or the Mandeville Gallery Offices: 518-388-6729.


Please visit: http://www.union.edu/Gallery/Upcoming.htm


 

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Students respectful of neighbors

Posted on Sep 25, 2005

Deborah Gaillardmiller remembers the nights when her children couldn't sleep because of the noise of Union College parties.


On her block of University Place, most of the houses are rented to college students, and nearly every night the music was cranked up, the kegs were dragged out and students celebrated until they puked on the grass.


But last year, the parties were noticeably quieter, and this year, it's possible to sleep even on weekends, Gaillardmiller said.


“They were much better last year,” she said. “When we first got here six years ago, oh my God, it was terrible. The school nights when the kids were trying to sleep – that really got to be a problem. Now, it's much better – it's very quiet now.”


Union college students are saying the same thing.


“It was louder last year,” said senior Noah Cayman, who lives a few doors down from Gaillardmiller. “There would be a party in one of the Union houses, I don't want to say every night, but more nights than not. Whereas this year, if you come in at midnight, 1 a.m. on a Friday or Saturday you might hear something, but not during the week.”


Hearing “something” is a far cry from the complaints neighbors used to have of students holding shouting contests in the street, urinating on the lawns and vomiting as they staggered home.


Last September, police received, on average, one noise complaint every three days. This year, they received an average of one complaint per week.


Neighbors say parties still draw a group, but not a crowd of 40 or more students.


There is still drinking – students threw beer bottles from their porches during a recent celebration – and music can still be heard after dark.


But neighbors rarely hear more than music now, they said, and the drinking takes place indoors rather than spilling out onto the sidewalks.


A reporter watched students party last weekend and found only two parties that could be heard from the street. Both parties ended voluntarily by 1 a.m.


For the past three weeks, a reporter also drove through the area after 10 p.m. each school night but could not find any large parties near the college.


On most nights, all that could be heard was the crickets.


“It is nice – the quiet is very nice,” Gaillardmiller said.


No one is quite sure why it's so quiet – or whether it will stay that way.


POLICE RESPONSE


Neighbors say police responded unusually quickly to noise complaints last year, teaching students to keep it down.


Police spokesman Lt. Peter Frisoni said officers got “very aggressive” in recent years in an attempt to solve the problem, saying officers made an effort to respond quickly to every noise complaint.


Once there, police would give students a warning: If they had to come back later, they would break up the party and possibly arrest the hosts for violating the noise ordinance.


“We haven't had to go back very often,” Frisoni said. “In the past few years we've had much more success – we've been very aggressive in policing the neighborhood . . . It seems to have worked. It has definitely improved.”


Police records show that for University Place alone, residents called to complain seven times in 20 days last September.


This year, there were only three calls in the same 20-day period.


Frisoni stressed that while most noise complaints on that street are for Union College student parties, the system does not differentiate the cause of the noise.


MORE ON CAMPUS


Frisoni and college officials also suggest the change may be attributed to the fact that fewer students live off campus.


In 2003, 375 students were given permission to rent apartments. This year, that fell to 221 students, largely because the college opened a new dormitory, College Park Hall (the former Ramada Inn on Nott Street).


“Certainly as fewer students live off-campus, there will be less student activity in those neighborhoods,” said college spokesman William F. Schwarz.


Some students say the real difference is that most of the offcampus students are now seniors, unlike past years when some juniors were also allowed to rent apartments.


They suspect the quiet can be mostly blamed on the dreaded senior thesis that most Union College seniors begin in September.


“Fall-term seniors don't have the time to party because of the thesis,” Cayman said.


But if that's the case, the parties will pick up after winter term, when most seniors have finished their theses.


“I think the few houses off campus are going to have big blowouts,” warned senior Erica Gierke.


However, students also said they go to local bars now because there are so few parties to attend near the college.


They blamed the college for that, saying restrictions on fraternity parties ruined the party atmosphere.


Fraternity parties must be registered if more than 12 people are going to attend, which means the hosts must take a class on how to check IDs and hold a safe party. All partyers over the age of 21 must wear a wristband if they want to drink, and servers cannot give drinks to anyone without a wristband.


That rule has been in place for years, but students say fraternities actually follow it now that they don't own individual houses on campus.


The college has taken over all the remaining fraternity houses in recent years and converted them to office and dormitory space.


The fraternities have been moved into other college-owned buildings.


PLEASANT SURPRISE


College officials were surprised to learn that neighbors felt the students were less rowdy this year.


“Oh my God – that's tremendous – I can't believe this,” said Thomas McEvoy, college dean of residential and campus life.


But he added that he has no idea why it's happened – although he said the students' theory about senior thesis work is plausible.


“In years past there were more juniors off campus, and they may have had more time on their hands,” he said.


Union has worked to increase the number of activities on campus through its “Minerva House” system, implemented in the fall of 2004. All students and faculty are assigned to one of seven houses, each with its own building with a fully equipped kitchen, seminar rooms, study areas, a great room with big-screen television and a budget for activities.


Still, McEvoy said the Minerva system is probably not a reason for the decline in loud parties.


 “I honestly don't think the people attending Minerva events are the same people that would have partied heavily,” he said, describing the events as quiet, “middleof-the-road” activities like video games and coffeehouses.


“I don't know why,” he said of noise complaints being down. “But it's great to hear.”


 

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