Union College News Archives

News story archive

Navigation Menu

Maria, Darcia, Tenzin & Nakhshab: Union welcomes Davis United World College Scholars

Posted on Sep 21, 2006


Davis Scholars 2006


They come from Russia, Mexico, India and Sweden.


This fall, Union welcomes four first-year international students who are experiencing the full range of campus life as part of a prestigious program designed to encourage cross-cultural understanding.


The Davis Scholars Program provides scholarships for students ages 16-19 who have graduated from a United World College (UWC), which offers a pre-university education at 10 sites around the globe.


Union's Davis Scholars, Class of 2010 are: Maria Tsvetkova from Saint Petersburg, Russia; Darcia L. Datshkovsky Senz from Mexico City; Tenzin Jamyang from Dharamsala, India; and Nakhshab Farhikhtah from Bara, Sweden.


“Thanks to the Davis grant, I have the opportunity to continue my education at Union, share my ideas with others and apply in the real world the things I learned at the University World College I attended in India,” says Datshkovsky Senz.


 As a participant in the Davis UWC Scholars Program, Union is in good company. The program has scholars at more than 65 American colleges and universities, including Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Colby, Williams and Swarthmore.


 “We're very pleased to be a participating college in the Davis Fund,” says Assistant Dean of Admissions and International Admissions Coordinator Kirin Liquori. “The United World College students are talented young men and women who have much to contribute to our campus community and beyond. They'll spend four years here, so they'll really have a chance to experience all Union has to offer.”


UWCs bring together students from diverse cultural and geographical backgrounds.


Today, there are UWCs in such places as Wales, Singapore, British Columbia and India, with more than 27,000 graduates from 176 countries. The colleges incorporate the International Baccalaureate (IB) curriculum, and after graduating, many students apply to four-year colleges in the United States, where they then qualify for a Davis scholarship.


The Davis programs were begun by Shelby Davis, founder of the Davis Funds, an independent money management firm in Boston. Davis made his fortune in the stock market and invests millions of dollars each year in scholarships.

Read More

President with 80 pairs of pants

Posted on Sep 21, 2006

SCHENECTADY — By the time he graduated from Union College in 1848, Chester Alan Arthur, a tall and lumpish country boy from Vermont, had been transformed.


   The hick had become an urban dandy who fretted about the cut of his green gabardine suit, the angle of his black top hat and the drape of his watch fob.



Whether it was the influence of his fraternity brothers at Psi Upsilon or fellow members of the debating society Delphian Institute, Arthur left Union with the affectation and refinement that later earned him the nickname “The Dude President.”



As an exhibit about its most famous alumnus displayed in the Nott Memorial on campus makes clear, the overlooked and lightly regarded 21st president of the United States had few peers in the White House when it came to matters of fashion and lavish entertainments.



Perhaps the first sign of Arthur's future dudish ways were his extravagant muttonchops — the size of apple turnovers — that he cultivated along with a full mustache at Union.



A classmate recalled Arthur as “genial and very sociable” at Union, though “not a very diligent student.”



“Chester Alan Arthur: The Elegant President” exhibit was assembled by Rachel Seligman, curator of the college's permanent collection. The idea came from political science professor emeritus James Underwood, who served as interim president until Stephen Ainlay assumed the duties as Union's 18th president earlier this year.



The exhibit draws upon the college's extensive archives on Arthur, including letters, photographs, political cartoons and some objects.



The most substantial item on display is a walnut desk with leather top that Arthur used when he was quartermaster general of New York state during the Civil War. Hidden slotted side compartments held a few cases of wine, according to lore.



“He loved the pleasures of the table,” recounted Arthur's friend Silas Burt, “and could carry a great deal of wine and liquor without any manifest effect other than greater variety of speech.”



There is no record of how much Arthur imbibed while in college, but some of his behavior suggests an undergraduate tippler.



One of the items displayed is a framed piece of a wooden sill on which C.A. Arthur carved his initials with a stencil's precision and a sharp penknife in Room 25 of the North College Dormitory where he stayed.



There are accounts in the college archives noting other minor infractions, according to Seligman, as well as suggestions of his affinity for gourmet food, cigars, billiards and fine liquor.



After graduating from Union, Arthur practiced law in New York City and became known for his support of equal rights for blacks. With a boost from Republican boss Roscoe Conkling, Arthur was appointed collector of the Port of New York in 1871 by President Ulysses S. Grant. Arthur controlled the considerable patronage at the Customs House for seven years.



In the 1880 presidential election, Arthur was elected vice president on the Republican ticket with James A. Garfield, who was later assassinated. Arthur was sworn in as the 21st president in 1881.



“I don't think he liked being president, and he wasn't particularly well-suited to the job,” Seligman said.



An assistant in the White House said of Arthur: “He'd never do today what he could put off until tomorrow.”



Biographers described a lax work ethic, in which President Arthur arrived late, enjoyed long lunches and regularly took three-day weekends.



And yet his reputation as a fashion plate was never sullied.



Gore Vidal described Arthur as “the most fastidious and fashionable president.”



Chet, as his close friends called him, reportedly kept more than 80 pairs of trousers in his wardrobe and changed pants several times a day.



Arthur learned the ways of high society from his wife, Ellen “Nell” Lewis Herndon, who came from a prominent family. The couple's parties in their Lexington Avenue townhouse in Manhattan were legendary.



Thomas Nast and other political cartoonists had a field day with Arthur. They lampooned him in Puck and Harper's Weekly as “the original political dude” and once dressed the president in drag for a panel titled “The Contest of Beauty.”



After he took up residence at the White House, Arthur commissioned lavish renovations from Louis Comfort Tiffany.



Arthur was interred at Albany Rural Cemetery in Menands, where a large, black sarcophagus was installed in 1889. The monument is flanked by a life-size bronze figure of the angel of sorrow holding a palm branch in her hand.


Read More

EVENTS

Posted on Sep 21, 2006


Thursday, Sept. 21, 4:30 p.m. / Phi Beta Kappa Rm., Schaffer Library/ Philosophy Department Speaker Series: “Concepts of the A Priori” with Stephen Schiffer of New York University



Friday, Sept. 22, 4 p.m. / College Park Field / Women's soccer vs. Clarkson



Friday, Sept. 22, through Monday, Sept. 25, 8 and 10 p.m. / Reamer Campus Center Auditorium / Movie: Click



Friday, Sept. 22, 10 p.m. / Old Chapel / U-Program extravaganza



Saturday, Sept. 23, 1 p.m. / Frank Bailey Field / Football vs. Rochester



Saturday, Sept. 23, 1 p.m. / College Park Field / Women's soccer vs. St. Lawrence



Monday, Sept. 25, 5:30 p.m. / Becker Career Center / Washington, D.C. Internship Institute information session



Tuesday, Sept. 26, 5 p.m. / Becker Career Center / Internship & job prep program



Wednesday, Sept. 27, 4 p.m. / Frank Bailey Field / Field Hockey vs. SUNY New Paltz



Friday, Sept. 29, 9 p.m. / Old Chapel / Comedian Kyle Grooms



Friday, Sept. 29, through Monday, Oct. 2, 7 p.m. / Reamer Campus Center Auditorium / Movie: Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl



Saturday, Sept. 30, 12 p.m. / College Park Field / Women's soccer vs. Stevens Tech



Saturday, Sept. 30, 6 p.m. / Frank Bailey Field / Football vs. U.S. Merchant Marine Academy



Saturday, Sept. 30, 6 p.m. / College Park Field / Men's Soccer vs. Plattsburgh State



Sunday, Oct. 1, 1 p.m. / College Park Field / Women's Soccer vs. St. John Fisher



Sunday, Oct. 1, 4:30 p.m. / Hale House / Pre-Kol Nidre festive dinner, sponsored by Hillel



Sunday, Oct. 1, 6:30 p.m. / Nott Memorial / Kol Nidre services with Hillel



Monday, Oct. 2, 8:30 a.m. / Nott Memorial / Yom Kippur meditation, with services at 9 a.m., talk on sexuality in Judaism at 4 p.m., services at 5 p.m.


Monday, Oct. 2, 7:30 p.m. / Kosher Kitchen, West / Yom Kippur break-fast

Read More

New faculty welcomed

Posted on Sep 21, 2006

Political Science: Zhang Wu, instructor, was completing her Ph.D. from Cornell University with a dissertation, “Public Woes in Agrarian China: Local Government and Peasant Protest in Hunan.” She has held several teaching positions at Cornell. Teaching and research interests include Chinese politics, comparative analysis of local government and social protest in China, the politics of transition in post-communist societies, the political economy of development, and East Asian political and economic development. Anne Reynolds, visiting instructor, holds a master's of Environmental Studies in Industrial Environmental Management from Yale University. She has held teaching positions at Massachusetts College of Nursing, Roxbury Community College and Yale. She also has worked extensively in air and energy advocacy and on other environmental health and safety issues in the private and public sectors, with a focus on coalition building, strategic planning, legislative research and community outreach.


Psychology: Cheryl Dicker, visiting assistant professor, holds a Ph.D. from the University of North Carolina with a dissertation, “Exploring the Nature of the Black as Fear Stereotype: A Social Cognitive Neuroscience Approach.” She has held teaching positions at the University of Missouri, University of North Carolina and Elon University. Among her research interests are examining the underlying neural and cognitive mechanisms related to stereotyping and prejudice, and exploring social categorization and the control of attention with psychophysiological measures.


Sociology: Janel Leone, visiting assistant professor, holds a Ph.D. from Pennsylvania State University with a thesis titled, “Conditions Under Which Women in Violent Relationships Seek Help: An Examination of a Control-Based Typology of Partner Violence.” She has taught at Wake Forest University, University of North Carolina at Greensboro and Pennsylvania State University. Her primary research interests are family sociology and partner violence.

Read More

Tenure committees formed

Posted on Sep 21, 2006


Ad hoc committees are reviewing the tenure of 10 professors: John Cramsie, History; Tomas Dvorak, Economics; Chris Fernandes, Computer Science; Bernhard Kuhn, English; Judith Lewin, English, Chad Orzel, Physics and Astronomy; Kristin Bidoshi, Modern Languages; Stephen Romero, Psychology; Christina Tonnesen-Friedman, Mathematics; and John Zumbrunnen, Political Science. Members of the Union community may submit written comments on their teaching, service or scholarship to committee members. Committees (with chairs listed first) are:



Cramsie: Alan Taylor, Mathematics (ext. 6197); Andrea Foroughi, History; Lori Marso, Political Science; Megan Ferry, Modern Languages.



Dvorak: Mark Toher, Classics, (ext. 6589); Fuat Sener, Economics; Robert Hislope, Political Science; Kristin Fox, Chemistry.



Fernandes: John Spinelli, Electrical and Computer Engineering (ext. 6307); Valerie Barr, Computer Science; Thomas Werner, Chemistry; Ruth Stevenson, English.



Kuhn: Mohammad Mafi, Engineering (ext. 6313); Kara Doyle, English; Walter Hatke, Visual Arts; Stephen Berk, History.



Lewin: Harold Fried, Economics (ext. 6368); Jordan Smith, English; Dianne McMullen, Music, Suzanne Benack, Psychology.



Orzel: Donald Rodbell, Geology (ext. 6034); Jay Newman, Physics and Astronomy; Yu Chang, Electrical and Computer Engineering; Linda Cool, Anthropology.



Bidoshi, Susan Niefield, Mathematics (ext. 6163); Daniel Mosquera, Modern Languages; Felmon Davis, Philosophy; Byron Nichols, Political Science.



Romero: David Hemmendinger, Computer Science (ext. 6319); Daniel Burns, Psychology; Quynh Chu-LaGraff, Biology; Robert Wells, History.



Tonnesen-Friedman: David Hannay, Computer Science (ext. 6318); Kathryn Lesh, Mathematics; Leo Fleishman, Biology; David Gerhan, Schaffer Library.



Zumbrunnen: Prof. Shelton Schmidt, Economics (ext. 6218); Clifford Brown, Political Science; Michelle Chilcoat, Modern Languages; James Adrian, Chemistry.

Read More