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Lani Guinier – Lift Every Voice: Turning a Civil Rights Setback into a New Vision of Social Justice

Posted on Nov 11, 2008

In advance of her appearance on campus,  Lani Guinier was interviewed live on WAMC’s “The Roundtable” Thursday, Nov. 6, discussing an Obama presidency and her plans for her Union visit.

Guinier, a noted  civil rights attorney and Harvard law professor,  is scheduled to speak Wednesday, Nov. 12 at 7 p.m. in the Nott Memorial. Her talk is part of the Presidential Forum on Diversity series.

To listen to the interview, click here

 

 

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Former NBA star fights to help Sudan

Posted on Nov 11, 2008

Manute Bol, who at 7-feet, 7-inches gained notoriety as the NBA’s tallest player and now uses his fame to support various causes in his native Sudan, visited campus Thursday, Nov. 6. Bol spoke to about 100 people in Memorial Chapel.

 To read about his talk in the Daily Gazette, click here (registration may be required).

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College to reprise successful LGBTQ exhibit

Posted on Nov 10, 2008

Following on the success of last spring’s juried show, College is gearing up for its second exhibition of art that thoughtfully interprets issues of importance to the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer community.

“LGBTQ: A Union Perspective,” will be held in the Wikoff Student Gallery, Nott Memorial, in the spring. The deadline for submissions is March 13. A formal call will go out in the winter term.

Students, faculty, staff and alumni are invited to submit original artworks in any medium or form. The show is tentatively scheduled for April 16-June 1.

“I’m so excited we’re doing this again. The student response last year was very positive, and we’ve got some new ideas on how to improve the process this year,” said Courtney Seymour, Schaffer Library Head of Collection Development, one of the show’s coordinators. “The whole experience was a moving one in that it broadened the dialogue on campus.”

Once again, the show will be a collaborative effort among many campus groups. Stay tuned for further details.

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Inaugural ‘Green Grant’ winners announced

Posted on Nov 10, 2008

Projects ranging from an innovative way to clean car exhaust to an expanded community garden were named Monday as the inaugural winners of the Presidential Green Grants, a new initiative aimed at supporting environmentally sustainable projects at Union. 

At an afternoon event at Old Chapel, President Stephen C. Ainlay highlighted 10 mostly student-led projects that will share $16,000 in grants. Each project will receive between $500 to $2,000, and plans call for similar grants to be awarded over the next two years. 

In Old Chapel on Nov. 10, 2008, President Stephen C. Ainlay with winners of the inaugural Presidential Green Grants.

"These grants should help us find the mechanisms by which we can improve the world. We are actually asking the Union community, 'How are we going to do this? What are the new ideas?'," Ainlay said. "Over the next couple of years, I hope we see even more good ideas that could become part of the way we do business at Union College."

The grants are part of wave of sustainable and environmentally friendly efforts at Union. All of these projects, including the student-driven U Recycle program, which covers the whole campus, are monitored by the U Sustain Committee. The committee is made up of about 70 students, faculty and staff. 

"These grants let us harness the creativity across the Union community. At an institution like Union, one person can make a really big difference," said Jeffrey Corbin, professor of biology and leader of the sustainability committee. "The Green Grants give a little bit of startup money to get these ideas off the ground."

Below is a list of the president's Green Grant Program winners and their project goals.  

“Fabrication of an aerogel composite catalytic converter”

Michael Bono '09  

Goal: Develop composite aerogel catalysts capable of converting the pollutants in automobile exhaust into less environmentally harmful compounds.

 

“Design and implementation of a micro-wind turbine to assess wind power generation on the Union College campus”

Kevin Donovan '09 and Malysa Cheng '09

Goal: A joint senior project among engineering students to design and manufacture a vertical axis micro-wind turbine. With this turbine, the students plan to test the feasibility of turbine locations and applications on campus.

 

“Canvas bags for U”

Kimberly Floeser '11

Goal: To replace plastic bags on campus with reusable canvas bags made out of recycled materials by making such bags available at various locations across campus.

A certificate for the inaugural Presidential Green Grants. November 2008.

 

“The Union Exchange Web site”

Cathy Griffin '09

Goal: To create an online forum for Union students, faculty and staff to exchange used items and help the College community reuse goods.

 

“Examination of ocean wave energy through the method of a point absorber wave energy buoy”

Edward Hancock '09 and Malcolm T. Dennison '09

Goal: To build or design an ocean wave energy buoy to better harvest ocean wave energy at a cost-efficient level.

 

“Octopus’s Garden Organic Garden expansion”

Hugh Jenkins, professor of English

Goal: To double the size of Octopus’s Garden, an organic garden run by students, faculty and staff that provides fresh food to local food shelters, campus Dining Services and the Ozone Café.

 

“Mugs for Minervas”

Tom McEvoy, associate dean of students and director of Minerva Programs

Goal: To buy 1,200 reusable coffee mugs for most Minerva houses to replace disposable plastic cups.

 

“Eco-Friendly Potting Shed”

David L. Sanders '09

Goal: To build a shed made entirely of environmentally friendly materials that will operate off the electricity grid, provide Octopus’s Garden with a storage facility for tools and educate the Union community about the possibilities of building green.

 

“Energy audit of Golub House and Fox Hall”

Jordan Silletti ’09

Goal: To use data loggers that measure the kilowatt usage of lights in Golub House and Fox Hall and to determine the percentage of power used to light each building. After the analysis is complete, Silletti will propose lighting projects to decrease energy usage in these buildings.

Cathy Griffin '09, one the inaugrual Presidential Green Grant winners, shakes hands with President Stephen C. Ainlay.

 

“Lighting the way to a more environmentally friendly campus”

Tyler Willey '11

Goal: To cut down Union’s energy usage through the installation of motion sensor lights in the showers and bathrooms in Davidson, Fox, West and Richmond dormitories. By installing motion sensors, the lights in these facilities will be running only when the facility is in use.

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Lani Guinier comes to campus Nov. 12

Posted on Nov 6, 2008

Here’s a reminder of a not-to-be missed lecture next week: The Presidential Forum on Diversity will present Lani Guinier, civil rights attorney and Harvard law professor, Wednesday, Nov. 12 at 7 p.m. in the Nott Memorial.

“Professor Guinier has a presence and message that captures the audience as she shares the challenges and triumphs of her academic and political career,” says Gretchel Hathaway Tyson, senior director of Campus Diversity and Affirmative Action, who is urging faculty members to encourage students to attend.

“In addition, she shares insights for individual growth while emphasizing the intellectual significance of diverse perspectives in academia.”  

In advance of her appearance on campus, Guinier was interviewed live on WAMC’s “The Roundtable” this morning, discussing an Obama presidency and her plans for her Union visit.

Lani Guinier, civil rights attorney and Harvard Law professor

Guinier’s campus talk will touch on her memoir, “Lift Every Voice: Turning a Civil Rights Setback into a New Vision of Social Justice.” She wrote the book after President Bill Clinton nominated her to head the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice in 1993. Her name, however, was withdrawn without a confirmation hearing when her views on proportional democratic representation and voter participation stirred controversy.

Before becoming Harvard Law School’s first black woman with a tenured professorship in 1998, Guinier spent 10 years as a tenured professor at the University of Pennsylvania Law School. During the 1980s, she was head of the voting rights project at the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, and she served in the Civil Rights Division during the Carter administration.

In addition to "Lift Every Voice," Guinier is the author of “Becoming Gentlemen: Women, Law School and Institutional Change,” based on research she conducted at Penn. She and her co-authors found that women were not graduating with top honors – despite the fact that women and men came to school with virtually identical credentials.

Guinier is a graduate of Radcliffe College of Harvard University and Yale Law School.

Wednesday’s event is free and open to the public.

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