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Posted on Sep 17, 2008

Professor leads report on discrimination by the American Medical Association 

When the American Medical Association apologized in July for its long practice of discrimination against black physicians, Professor Robert B. Baker found himself in the thick of a controversy involving the country’s oldest and largest physicians’ group.

Baker, chair of the Rapaport Ethics Across the Curriculum Initiative and the William D. Williams Professor of Philosophy, was the lead author of a study of the AMA’s racial policies, which prompted the historic apology.

Baker and a team of independent experts convened by the AMA in 2005 dug deep into past practices of the medical association, specifically examining the period between 1846 and 1968. The research uncovered by the panel painted an ugly picture of racial bias and discrimination that is “linked to the current paucity of African-American physicians, distrust Professor leads report on discrimination by the American Medical Associationof professional associations by some physicians, and contemporary racial health disparities,” according to the group’s report in the July 16 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.

In commentary in the same issue of JAMA, Ronald M. Davis, immediate past presi- dent of the AMA, cited the panel’s work and said: “The medical profession, which is based on a boundless respect for human life, had an obligation to lead society away from disrespect of so many lives. The AMA failed to do so and has apologized for that failure.”

The AMA hopes its apology and other initiatives will help close the racial divide in medicine. According to the AMA’s Web site, as of 2006, less than 2 percent of its members were black and fewer than 3 percent of the country’s 1 million medical students and physicians were black, despite blacks representing roughly 13 percent of the U.S. population.

As Baker, who also directs the Union Graduate College-Mount Sinai School of Medi- cine Bioethics Program, told the Washington Post: “The apology is important because a heritage of discrimination is evident in the under-representation of African-Americans in medicine generally and in the AMA in particular. Patterns of segregated medicine still haunt American health care. The legacy of these decisions affects minority patients on a daily basis.”

 

Eight graduates making their mark in the world as Minerva Fellows

Shortly after Commencement, eight graduates headed off on separate trips to Cambodia, Southern Uganda and other foreign destinations where, for 11 months, they will get a first- hand look at the human side of poverty. The eight students comprise the College’s first Minerva Fellows, a scholarship program designed to instill in new graduates an entrepreneurial approach to social problems and a lasting commitment to the poor.

The selected students come from Union’s seven Minerva Houses, which serve students’ social and academic interests. All students, faculty and staff are assigned to a Minerva House.

The Minerva Fellows will team up with a social organization and report to their assigned country in July. They return to Union in May, where they will live on campus for a month. During that time, they will participate in an ongoing course on social entrepreneurship, recount their experiences for other students and give presentations at Minerva Houses and classes. The goal is to make the Minerva Fellows an integral part of the Union experience.

“We have incredibly talented students ready to assist extremely worthwhile organizations. Not only will they be helping others, they themselves will be transformed in the process. The thought of them returning to Union to share their experiences makes this a very special program,” said Tom McEvoy, associate dean of students and director of Minerva Programs.

Fulbright adventures

For three recent Union grads, a Fulbright adventure is underway.

Michelle E. Koo ’08 earned a Fulbright teaching assistantship in Madrid, where she will through June assist a secondary school classroom and build a model U.N. project. Victoria Leonard ’07 is now working in a Fullbright teaching assistantship at a secondary school near Paris. And Lauren Youngman ’08 earned an English teaching assistantship in France that is sponsored by the French government and administered by the Fulbright Program.

“The increasing number of Union students winning these awards shows that institutions like the Fulbright Program and foreign governments recognize the quality of a Union education,” said Maggie Tongue, director of postgraduate fellowships. “When they recruit our students, they get young adults with a solid education as well as a global perspective.”

The Fulbright teaching assistantship program administers 38 Fulbright grants in Spain, five Fulbright grants in France and 50 assistantship grants given by the French Ministry of Education. The Fulbright Program is run by the U.S. Department of State and was established in 1946 with help from U.S. Sen. J. William Fulbright. In 2007, the program gave roughly 6,000 grants totaling $262 million.

Koo, who was a psychology major and salutatorian for the Class of 2008, works 20 hours a week at the school in Madrid. She plans to seek out community service projects during her free time.

After returning from Spain, Koo will become an elementary school teacher for a Northern California chapter of Teach for America, which sends recent graduates to teach in low-income school districts for up to two years.

“I have found that volunteering is the most fulfilling way I can spend my time and I want to expose my students to the positive aspects of volunteering and instill in them the importance of giving back and helping others,” Koo said.

Leonard, who earned a master’s degree in education from Union Graduate College in June, is working at a secondary school in Sartrouville, near Paris. In addition to the assistantship, Leonard plans to start a ballroom dance club for French students.

Youngman, who completed a term abroad in Ireland and a Union term in Washington, D.C., is spending six months as a teaching assistant at a secondary school academy in Leon, France. Youngman, a history major with minors in political science and French, hopes to build a career in international relations.

 

Research paves way for a sustainable sidewalk

As a light rain fell on an early July morning, several members of the Union community labored on, unaffected. Their job: to pave a walkway behind Memorial Fieldhouse using a newly developed eco-friendly mixture of permeable concrete that could solve some storm water drainage problems.

The mixture, pervious rubberized concrete, or PRC, contains aggregate, sand, cement and rubber, and presents a new use for old tires. It grew out of a collaborative effort by Professor Ashraf Ghaly and mechanical engineering major Andrew Heiser ’09, who began research on their product last summer.

Developing the concrete was difficult, Ghaly said, because of the unique integration of rubber in its ingredients. The biggest challenge “was to come up with an optimum mixture.”

“Rubber decreases the overall strength, but makes the concrete more durable,” Heiser said. “It is therefore a balance of trying to find the correct amount of rubber to obtain for optimal permeability, while also keeping the concrete strong enough for its desired purpose.”

Working with members of Facilities Services, Ghaly and Heiser used three different ratios of the mixture to pave the Fieldhouse walkway. Although every mixture is strong enough to behave like typical concrete, they were seeking the combination that allows for the most permeability.

“The concrete we poured is pervious, which allows water to percolate through—thus charging underground aquifers, reducing heat island effect and eliminating the need for drainage accessories,” Ghaly said.

This fall, as part of his senior project, Heiser will examine how PRC responds to both hot and cold conditions. It is, he believes, a unique way for Union to differentiate itself in its sustainability efforts.

Ghaly, a proponent of sustainability as a way of life both on campus and off, said that after a year’s worth of trial and error in the lab, he hopes the PRC project “demonstrates that small and simple ideas are like little seeds that grow and become big trees. These ideas have the potential to make a significant difference in our environment.

 

Kara Lightman '09: 'Peace scholar' helps women in Cambodia

Kara Lightman took her first trip to Cambodia in 2005 after graduating from high school. The Concord, Mass. native traveled there with her family, who had started a foundation to help the villagers of Tramung Chrum.

“The first time I went, I didn’t quite grasp it. Everything was so different and frightening,” Lightman said. “The second time, I had an overwhelming sense I needed to do something. The country has been so heavily destroyed. You walk down the street and see people whose faces have been burned off.”

During the summer, Lightman, who was particularly taken by the plight of the women of Cambodia, traveled alone to the Southeast Asian village. Her mission: to help Cambodian girls escape lives of poverty, ignorance and domestic violence by introducing them to the importance of education.

Lightman’s efforts were supported by the Kathryn Wasserman Davis Projects for Peace. She is one of 100 students from more than 85 American colleges and universities who will receive $10,000 to help promote world peace.

An interdepartmental major in anthropology and political science, Lightman is the daughter of Jean, an artist, and Alan Lightman, a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and author of the 1999 international bestseller, Einstein’s Dreams.

In 2006, Alan Lightman created the Harpswell Foundation, a nongovernmental organization, after helping a friend build schools in Tramung Chrum, about 50 miles from the Cambodian capital of Phnom Penh.

“We became very close with this village,” Kara said. “They have no plumbing, no running water, no electricity; they tell time by when the sun rises.”

Upon learning that many women can’t go to college because there is nowhere safe for them to live (men can stay in monasteries, but Buddhist rules bar women from taking shelter there), Alan Lightman raised money and bought land, and in 2006, Harpswell built the first women’s dormitory in Cambodia, in Phnom Penh. The more than 30 young women who live there also receive room and board and leadership training.

“I have been greatly inspired by this project, and now I want to do my own work to help the women of Cambodia,” Kara said.

She noted that thousands of women suffer from domestic violence and marital rape, and that by 13, many girls are often sent away to work in the rice fields or as prostitutes to support their families.

“I would like to encourage girls to stay in school and become educated, which will allow them to get reputable jobs and eventually give money back to their families and villages. I want to use education as a tool to give women a voice.”

One of the poorest countries in the world, Cambodia saw almost its entire educated class destroyed when the notoriously brutal government, the Khmer Rouge, took power in the 1970s.

Lightman will spend about six weeks traveling around the country with three women from the Harpswell dormitory who will share their struggles Kara Lightman ’09: ‘Peace scholar’ helps women in Cambodiaand their stories. Ultimately, she wants her efforts to embody what is inscribed in both Khmer and English on the brass plaque in the Harpswell dormitory: “Our mission is to empower a new generation of Cambodian women.”

Lightman left for Cambodia in July and is spending her fall term in Fiji. She plans to return to campus with a photojournalistic account of her work in Cambodia.

“I’ve been there four times, and I have far more culture shock now coming back to the States than I do when I go there,” she said. “It’s hard to go and not do anything. The people are so generous, and the thing that is so amazing is that even though they have so little, they have hope.”

At Union, Lightman is a member of Sigma Delta Tau, the Young Democrats Club and the Model U.N. Club. She credits her political science advisor, Darius Watson, and the Anthropology Department for sparking her passion to study other cultures.

Lightman is the second Union student to be named a “peace scholar.” Last year, when the awards were created, Karyn Amira ’08 received funding for her efforts to curb landmines in Cambodia.

For more information about 100 Projects for Peace, visit www.kwd100projectsforpeace.org

 

Former lax coach honored

Former men’s lacrosse coach Bruce Allison was featured in a magazine distributed at the NCAA Men’s Lacrosse National Championship held last May at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Mass.

The NCAA’s Lacrosse Magazine recounted the story of Allison and former Union Athletics Director Wilford “Bill” Ketz drafting a postseason tournament proposal that was enacted by the NCAA in 1971. The tournament has since become an annual Memorial Day event that draws thousands and enjoys national television exposure. The story, headlined “Growing the Game,” portrays Allison as a critical part of the sport’s foundation and surge in popularity.

The story also quotes Union men’s lacrosse coach Paul Wehrum:

“We hold our Bruce Allison Tournament at Union every fall in his honor,” Wehrum said. “He looks exactly the way he did nearly 40 years ago—very tall and strong. When he coached lacrosse at Union he was also the freshman football coach. He used to get his football players to come out for lacrosse. I’ve seen some of his former players—guys who might be 62 years old—call him Coach or Coach Allison. Never Bruce. I’ve never called him Bruce. That’s the kind of respect he gets. The first time I met him he was president of the USILA. He handed me my certificate at the dinner the first time I made all-America (1970). He shook my hand and said, ‘Congratulations, but you need to work on your left hand.’ ”

Allison served the College from 1957 through 1976. He started at Union as a coach of wrestling, men’s lacrosse and freshman football, becoming director of athletics and chairman of physical education in 1971. He coached men’s lacrosse for 19 seasons (1958-1976), and had many memorable victories including wins over Syracuse University in 1966 and 1974. As the director of athletics, he established six intercollegiate women’s programs. He lives in Golden, Colo. with his wife, Ann.

Grant funds national study on cybercycling for seniors

Union College has received a grant from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation to explore how interactive digital gaming can improve the health of people age 50 and older.

The College will be a part of one of 11 research teams that will receive up to $200,000 each from the foundation’s Health Games Research program to measure the effects that playing video games has on the young and the old.

At Union, researchers will spend two years examining the physiological and neuro-psychological impact of cybercycling on area seniors. Players on a stationary bike will be monitored for heart rate, body composition, cognitive function, social relationships and other measures while racing against a virtual cycling partner.

The idea is to make exercise for a group not prone to participate more competitive and fun. In the video games, players can compete against themselves or others.

“The benefits of aerobic exercise on brain health are well documented,” said Cay Anderson-Hanley, assistant professor of psychology and the project’s lead researcher. She is collaborating with Paul Arciero, an associate professor of exercise science at Skidmore College.

“Yet studies have shown that across the lifespan, exercise participation decreases dramatically, with fewer than 10 percent of seniors exercising at the recommended levels. We hope to clarify which factors about cybercycling may help increase exercise behaviors.”

She anticipates that for some seniors, competing against one’s self or others in 3-D will enhance motivation, while for others collaborating with a virtual league will increase participation.

Players will exercise at their resident or senior center, and be evaluated at the Healthy Aging & Neuropsychology Lab run by Anderson-Hanley or the Exercise Science Lab at Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs, N.Y. Researchers hope to recruit players and also set up work stations at area senior centers.

“This grant allows two small liberal arts colleges to combine efforts and push the envelope of our research in some new and exciting ways,” said Anderson-Hanley. “Ideally, it would be wonderful to see that some isolated, sedentary seniors might start looking forward to climbing on their cybercycle to ‘spin’ with an old friend who may live across the country, but with whom they can work toward a common goal of improving their physical and cognitive health, all while having fun.”

Other institutions to receive grants include Cornell University, University of Florida and the University of North Carolina.

Health Games Research, a national program that supports research to enhance the quality and impact of interactive games used to improve health, is headquartered at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

 

College volunteers wrap up Habitat house work

A family of seven from Schenectady has a new home, thanks to the College and the local chapter of Habitat for Humanity.

Michael and Kelly Harris, and their five children—Sujea, 12, Sabrina, 9, Michael, Jr., 8, Isaiah, 8, and Samone, 3— were surrounded by dozens of well-wishers on a Sunday in mid-May as the house at 1124 Barrett St. was officially dedicated.

“I just want to say thank you to everyone,” an emotional Kelly Harris said, standing in the middle of her crowded new kitchen. “I love all the volunteers so much. They worked really hard. They’re just wonderful people.”

The College donated the house to the local Habitat chapter, and the campus community has worked since last fall to help refurbish it.

President Stephen C. Ainlay said the genesis for the project sprang from students inspired by their trip to New Orleans to help with rebuilding efforts after Hurricane Katrina.

Ainlay challenged the campus community to help restore the home as a way to recultivate its sense of social-connectedness and civic commitment. Hundreds of volunteers, including members of athletic teams, Greek organizations, student groups, faculty, staff and administrators pitched in to renovate the house, built in 1910.

The family also chipped in 400 hours of “sweat equity” in their new home, which is just blocks from campus

 

College names new V.P. for College Relations

Stephen A. Dare, formerly of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, was named in early September vice president for College Relations by President Stephen C. Ainlay.

Dare succeeds Thomas C. Gutenberger, who left in July after nine years to become vice president for advancement at the University of Richmond, his alma mater.

At Union, Dare will be responsible for managing alumni relations, development, communications and community relations, along with foundation, corporate and government relations.

“I am thrilled and delighted to be a part of the Union community,” Dare said. “To be able to work with President Ainlay and the Board of Trustees, continuing to raise support for this historic institution, is an honor.”

Dare will also direct the College’s $250 million You are Union fund-raising campaign.

“Tom and his staff deserve much credit for the success of the campaign thus far, and their professionalism was a significant reason why Union was such a great opportunity,” he said.

Dare has more than 26 years of fundraising experience in higher education. He joined MIT in 1998 as director of resource development, overseeing the daily operations of the development organization and serving as campaign manager for MIT’s recently completed $2 billion campaign. He also served as interim vice president for resource development. Since March 2007, Dare has been senior managing director of development and campaign strategies and was overseeing a $500 million campaign for students.

Prior to joining MIT, Dare was director of development for endowment and capital programs at Boston College and director of development and alumni relations at Johns Hopkins University’s Whiting School of Engineering and its School of Continuing Studies.

“We had an excellent pool of candidates for this critical position, and we are very fortunate to have someone of Steve’s caliber join our Union family,” Ainlay said. “His leadership, vision and wealth of experience in college relations will be instrumental as we work to implement the key components of our Strategic Plan.”

A native of Washington Township, N.J., Dare has a bachelor’s in communications and a master’s in educational public relations, both from Rowan University.

He and his wife, Rosemary, have a son, Matthew, who will be a senior in high school this fall. The family resides in Franklin, Mass. Dare began his new job Sept. 2

 

Curricula Vitae

Judith Lewin, associate professor of English, women’s and gender studies, and religion, recently completed a scholar-in-residency program at the Hadassah Brandeis Institute at Brandeis University for her book project on Jewish women’s writing. In addition, she has authored a book chapter about a historical fiction film, The Governess, which appeared in cinemas in 1998. The chapter discusses stereotypes associated with Jewish women’s sexuality in 1830s British culture and complements two other pieces on Jewish women by Lewin in print this spring. Lewin also was elected to a four-year term on the Women’s Caucus Board of the international Association for Jewish Studies.

“A 20th-Century Faust,” a book review by Mark Walker, the John Bigelow Professor of History, appears in American Scientist, the magazine of science and technology published by Sigma Xi, the Scientific Research Society. Walker reviewed Von Braun: Dreamer of Space, Engineer of War by Michael J. Neufeld (Knopf, 2007). Wernher von Braun was a German physicist and astronautics engineer and leader in rocket technology.

Cheikh M. Ndiaye, assistant professor of French and Francophone studies, published an article, “Marronnage, Oralité et Écriture dans Solibo Magnifique de Patrick Chamoiseau,” in the Francophone studies journal, Nouvelles Etudes Francophones. The article is a revision of a conference paper Ndiaye had previously presented at the Rocky Mountain Modern Languages Association annual convention in Idaho.

Associate professor of chemistry Michael Hagerman recently received a grant of $75,400 from the Center for Advanced Microelectronics Manufacturing at the State University of New York at Binghamton and National Aeronautics and Space Administration to fund solar cell nanomaterials research titled, “Self-Assembled Laponite/CdSe/PANI/PEDOT Nanocomposite Thin Film Photovoltaics on Flex.” This work is in collaboration with Wayne Jones, chemistry professor at the University at Binghamton. The funding, from July 1 through June 30, 2009, will support undergraduate and graduate research in nanotechnology bridging Union College, the University at Binghamton and local industrial partner, Evident Technologies.

Janet Anderson, the Florence B. Sherwood Professor of Physical Science and Professor of Chemistry, and others, recently published an article in Biochemistry. They used electrostatic calculations to explain the observed hydrogen exchange rates for amide protons on the surface of the rubredoxin protein.

An article by Rebecca Surman, associate professor of physics, appears in the June issue of Astrophysical Journal Letters. It is titled “r-Process Nucleosynthesis in Hot Accretion Disk Flows from Black Hole-Neutron Star Mergers.” Co-authors are G.C. McLaughlin, M. Ruffert, H.-Th. Janka and W.R. Hix. Surman presented this work recently at the annual meeting of the American Physical Society in St. Louis and at seminars at Duke University and North Carolina State University.

Andrew Rapoff, assistant professor of mechanical engineering, and Ronald Bucinell, the Thomas J. Watson, Sr. and Emma Watson Day Professor of Mechanical Engineering and department chair, along with Scott McGraw, of The Ohio State University, and David Daegling, of the University of Florida, recently presented research titled “Full Field Noncontacting Strain Measurements in the Colobine Mandibular Symphysis” at the annual meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthro- pologists in Columbus, Ohio.

Andrew Morris, assistant professor of history, attended the Policy History Conference in St. Louis recently. He organized a panel titled “Privatizing Public Policy and Public Services,” which considered various aspects of the history of privatization in the United States. He also presented a paper, “Privatizing Human Services: The Nonprofit Sector and the Contracting State,” which looked at the origins and evolution of government’s use of nonprofit agencies as service delivery mechanisms. The material in his paper is derived from his forthcoming book, The Limits of Voluntarism: Charity and Welfare from the New Deal Through the Great Society, to be published by Cambridge University Press in early 2009

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Sally van Schaick ’58: The first in ’58

Posted on Sep 17, 2008

BY SHAUNA E. KEELER '09 

Wearing a borrowed graduation robe and a pair of darkly rimmed glasses, Sally van Schaick made history on June 15, 1958 by becoming the first woman to receive a Union bachelor’s degree.

A promotional effort launched by then-President Carter Davidson helped land news of her degree from Union, then an all–male college, in newspapers across the United States. One friend read a story and noted an accompanying photo in a San Diego newspaper that showed Sally van Schaick leaving her house and kissing her children prior to a night class.

Sally van Schaick ’58 receives her Union degree on June 15, 1958, becoming the first woman to earn a bachelor’s degree from the College. Union College magazine, Summer 2008.

“I didn’t give much thought to completing a degree. But I decided that I might as well train for teaching because that would fit nicely with being the mother of a lot of kids,” said Sally van Schaick during a recent interview.

So in the mid-1950s, Sally van Schaick, a mother of five living in Schenectady who had nearly 15 years before begun pursing her degree at Duke University, rejoined college life. And after earning her bachelor’s degree, she went on to earn a master’s degree in education from Union in 1961 and later enjoyed a 32-year career as an English teacher at several schools in Schenectady and Saratoga Springs.

Union became a fully co-educational institution in 1970, when about 150 women, including transfer students, were admitted. The first graduates from that group earned degrees in 1972 and two years later about 125 women became the first to earn four-year degrees. Prior to that, in 1925, Florence Fogler Buckland became the first woman to earn a master’s degree, in the field of electrical engineering, from the College.

Sally van Schaick’s long road to Schenectady and Union began in 1941, at the outset of the U.S. involvement in World War II, when she met John van Schaick ’61. John van Schaick was then a young soldier training to fly airplanes for the U.S. Army Air Force at a base in Florida. After just six weeks, the couple married and the former Sally Brown dropped out of college, a year and a half short of a diploma at Stetson University in Deland, Fla., a college to which she had transferred to be closer to home.

“People do that during wars,” Sally van Schaick said of the quick marriage. “They get the feeling that this is the last time they are going to meet people on earth and they’d better make the most of it.”

The couple met at an Elks Club dance in Fort Myers, where John van Schaick was training to fly the B-26B Martin Marauder bomber. John van Schaick later recorded his World War II service and courtship of Sally Brown in a memoir called Surviving Against the Odds: A Bomber Pilot’s Memories from World War II in the Solomons and Elsewhere.

By the mid-1950s, the couple and new family had settled in Schenectady, where John van Schaick was working as a writer in the electronics engineering division at General Electric. At the same time, the College began accepting women in the evening division, although women were unable to enroll in daytime classes.

Sally van Schaick decided it was time to go back to college. Also, it was then that John van Schaick, who was also shy of completing his degree before the war, took advantage of what the evening division offered. The couple frequently took courses together. John van Schaick earned a bachelor’s degree in 1961 and master’s degree in education in 1964.

Despite the almost 20-year gap in her college career, Sally van Schaick felt very comfortable in the classroom.

“One of the hurdles of going back to school when you’re 35 or 40, is you’re scared to death that you’re going to be terrible because you weren’t all that great. Turns out, you’re much better. You’re more focused. It’s a breeze,” she said.

Sally van Schaick particularly enjoyed the courses taught by English and philosophy professor Carl Niemeyer. “He was an extraordinary teacher,” she recalled.

In 1990 Sally van Schaick ran as the Democratic candidate for Schenectady’s New York State Assembly seat against Republican James Tedisco ’72, who narrowly won the race and is now the minority leader in the Assembly. The couple have also been active volunteers in the Schenectady County Historical Association for many years.

Today they live about a mile from campus in a house off Stratford Road in the GE Realty Plot.  

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David Falk ’39: Giving back

Posted on Sep 17, 2008

 

During his junior year at Union in 1938, David Falk ran out of tuition money.

“I just came up short. I didn’t have it. The College could have told me, ‘Well, no tuition, no classes,’” Falk said. “They didn’t do that. They made a deal with me where I could finish out my school year and pay them back as I could, which I did. That was very impressive to me. I feel that if I can help students who are feeling financial pressure, I should do so.”

David Falk ’39 helps pick oranges near his Palm Springs, Calif. home. Union College magazine, Summer 2008

After graduating in 1939, Falk earned a degree from the nearby Albany Medical College and later served in the U.S. Army Medical Corps during World War II. In 1950 he settled in Bakersfield, Calif., where he went into private practice and later met his wife, Elynor. In 1976, the Falks established the David and Elynor Falk Endowed Scholarship. The scholarship fund has since helped dozens of students cover the cost of attending Union.

As a Union student in the late 1930s, Falk commuted from Albany for day classes in Schenectady with three or four other students in a beat-up old car. It was then near the end of the Great Depression and most families in upstate New York were struggling. For Falk, that meant evenings and summers were largely spent working for tuition money.

“I drove a truck. I was a delivery man. I was a night watchman. I did whatever I could to earn money. You have to remember in those days there were people who couldn’t find work. If I didn’t work and get the money, I couldn’t do what I wanted to do,” Falk said.

By the early 1940s Falk had completed medical school and joined the war effort. Falk was en route to Japan, as part of a naval convoy, when the United States military dropped two atomic bombs on Japan, hastening the end of World War II. Falk’s ship was redirected from the Panama Canal to New York City, leaving Falk with a major decision. He could return to New York’s Capital Region or move on to southern California. It was January of 1946 and the prospect of another winter in the Northeast was too daunting.

“I got to California—Union Station in Los Angeles—and went outside. The sun was blazing and the temperature was 86. I took off my overcoat and never put it back on again. I said, ‘I am never leaving here,’” Falk said.

While in private practice, Falk became chief of the department of urology at Kern County General Hospital in Bakersfield. He married Elynor Rudnick, a commercial helicopter service owner and pilot, in 1962. From 1976 to 1992, Falk was a field representative for the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations. In that role, he traveled around the country to assure that care given at Medicare-funded hospitals was adequate.

Falk, who lives in Palm Springs, is also a generous donor to Albany Medical College, where he created an endowed chair in urology. His wife Elynor, who died in 1996, was a rancher’s daughter who attended UCLA and later ran family farms and managed property in Bakersfield, Indio and Palm Springs.

In May 2007, he created the David Falk ’39 and Elynor Rudnick-Falk Professorship in engineering, now held by Cherrice Traver, dean of Engineering and Computer Science. Other Union gifts from Falk include a two-manual harpsichord given in memory of former professor of music, Elmer Tidmarsh.

“Listening to music is something I find valuable to the present day. Professor Tidmarsh was a good teacher and composer and a great organist. He was very much dedicated to the music of Bach,” Falk said. “He explained to us in his music appreciation class how the music was written and how to listen. The music became less opaque. It became understandable to us.”  

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Founders Medal, standing ovation for the man in the wings

Posted on Sep 17, 2008

 

For a complete list of upcoming Chamber Concert Series performances, click here

 

The final concert of last season’s Union College Chamber Concert Series began on a special note when the College presented Daniel Berkenblit, series director, with the Founders Medal for his efforts in bringing “an extraordinary cultural institution” to campus and the Capital Region.

The final concert of last season’s Union College Chamber Concert Series began on a special note when the College presented Daniel Berkenblit, series director, with the Founders Medal for his efforts in bringing “an extraordinary cultural institution” to c

President Stephen C. Ainlay thanked Berkenblit for his “boundless passion, sincere generosity and keen attention to detail” in making Memorial Chapel a regular stop for the world’s most renowned performers. During the last 36 years, Berkenblit has organized some 470 concerts in the acoustically superb chapel as part of the Union College Chamber Concert Series.

Ainlay presented the medal for Berkenblit to wear on a ribbon around his neck. The Founders Medal was created in 1968 to honor a person who embodies the vision of the College’s founders and who has made a distinctive contribution to the welfare of the College.

Joining the two men on stage were members of the Emerson String Quartet, longtime Union friends, who performed an all-Brahms program later that afternoon.

“Throughout it all, you have modestly stayed in the wings while audiences cheer the artists,” Ainlay told Berkenblit. “Today, it is our turn to acknowledge you, the artist, for bringing this wonderful music into our lives.”

Berkenblit received a standing ovation from the sold-out audience and an impromptu round of “Happy Birthday.” He celebrated his 78th birthday the next day.

In addition to the Emerson String Quartet, Berkenblit has brought to Memorial Chapel such renowned artists as Musicians from Marlboro, Boston Camerata, Emmanuel Ax, Lang Lang, James Galway and Wu Han. During the last concert season, Berkenblit helped arrange separate gatherings between students and pianist Emmanuel Ax and the Emerson String Quartet.

“Dan's concert series is a great treasure for the Capital Region. One has the opportunity to hear some of the finest soloists and ensembles in the world," said Dianne McMullen, a professor of music and College organist. “As part of my music appreciation classes, I require students to attend several concerts. After the course is over, many keep coming back. In fact, a number of upper-class students have told me that they wish they had paid attention to the advertisements about the series during their initial years at Union.”

A native of Brooklyn, Berkenblit holds a medical degree from SUNY Downstate Medical Center in Brooklyn. Founders Medal, standing ovation for the man in the wings He served a residency in pathology at Brooklyn Metho- dist Hospital before working at several other hospitals and laboratories. He spent most of his career at St. Mary’s Hospital in Troy, from 1967 until his retirement in 2001.

His early musical training was on the piano, and he would go on to play the oboe in high school and in college. He became serious about chamber music—and perhaps about promoting it—during the summers of 1953 and 1954, when he traveled to Marlboro Music Festival from his summer job as a bus boy at the nearby Lake Spofford Hotel.

He and his wife, Phillipine, live in Schenectady and Stratton, Vt.

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Making the case for engineering as a liberal art

Posted on Sep 17, 2008

Union hosts national symposium titled Engineering and Liberal Education for leaders of more than a dozen top colleges and universities.

Arguing that all students need a broad-based education to compete in an increasingly technological world, President Stephen C. Ainlay told a crowd of leaders from U.S. colleges that it’s time to make the case for engineering as a liberal art.

President Stephen C. Ainlay. Union College magazine, summer 2008.

“The time has come for the Academy as a whole to regard engineering as a fully legitimate component of the liberal arts,” Ainlay said in opening remarks at a national symposium, Engineering and Liberal Education, held at Union in May.

In his speech, titled “Re-imagining Liberal Education in the 21st Century,” Ainlay stressed that “some basic paradigm shifts are needed before engineering is regarded as fully integral to the liberal arts.”

It will mean more than redefining traditional academic boundaries, he said.

“The intellectual traditions and divides forged over centuries cannot be quickly re-imagined,” Ainlay said. “It is, rather, a larger project that not only involves changing the nature of a modern education and what we teach to college students, but also how we think about knowledge and its sources.

“If the integration of engineering with the sciences, social sciences and humanities does not take place at the levels of basic conceptualization and intellectual purpose, it will not be sufficiently well grounded to become broadly accepted across the Academy.”

Union's engineering milestones. Union College magazine, summer 2008.

The idea of integrating engineering into the liberal arts is attracting considerable buzz on college campuses. A white paper issued in December 2007 by James J. Duderstadt, a president emeritus of the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, urged universities to better prepare all undergraduates to understand and solve technical problems. In April, Princeton University announced a $25 million gift to help integrate the two disciplines.

In 1845, Union became the first liberal arts college to offer engineering. In that tradition, the symposium explored different models for integrating engineering, technology and the traditional liberal arts.

Among the symposium participants were representatives from Princeton, Dartmouth College, Swarthmore College, Lafayette College, Smith College, Trinity College, Villanova University, the U.S. Military Academy, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Sweet Briar College, Tufts University, University of Vermont, University of Georgia and Worcester Polytechnic Institute.

Ainlay told participants at the symposium that they “have a remarkable opportunity to push the conversation about engineering and liberal education forward.” But he cautioned that “the integration of engineering into the liberal arts is no single institution’s innovation or mandate. It is a national and even international mandate, important to our collective future. We will be far more effective if we all work together.”

Besides Ainlay, others who spoke included Carol Christ, president of Smith College; Lance Schachterle, associate provost of WPI; and Domenico Grasso, dean of the College of Engineering and Mathematics, University of Vermont.

“There is real urgency to educate students who are great scientists and engineers and who can see the big picture,” said Cherrice A. Traver, Union’s dean of Engineering, citing concerns of the National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Engineering. “We understand that narrowly educated graduates are not prepared to address  either the threats or the opportunities presented by the technological world.”

The symposium was funded in part by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation of New York City.

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