Union College News Archives

News story archive

Navigation Menu

Student Speaker Sean Mulkerne ’09: Life is what you make of it

Posted on Jun 8, 2009

In the past few months, I’ve thought a great deal about my time at Union; the conversations I have had with people here; the classes I have taken; and the things I have accomplished. In particular, however, I’ve thought about a question often posed to me at home while catching up with friends and family I haven’t seen in some time. “How do you feel about Union?”

When I was a first-year, I usually just replied with the stock answers: “Oh, it’s wonderful! Classes are challenging! There are so many fun things to do! You really get to know everyone!” While I certainly still hold those statements to be true, as I got a bit older and developed more nuanced ideas about my education, I began to answer this question a bit differently. I found that the best way to encapsulate my experiences at Union was to say the following: “Union College is exactly what you make of it.”

That might seem a bit generic – it probably is – but I haven’t found a better way to describe this campus or the people you find walking through it. Union and its community cannot be pithily described, because they are in a constant state of flux, and each individual has the opportunity to shape the College into something that excites and challenges them.

Student speaker Sean D. Mulkerne addresses his fellow graduates. Commencement 2009.

You have a great idea – maybe a bike program or a green garden shed – and you want to get it off the ground? There are places on campus that are begging for your input. Are you frustrated with some kind of perceived apathy? Organize students in whatever way you can toward a positive goal, like creating a more sustainable campus or tying a big pink ribbon around the Nott. Would you like to expand your horizons academically? It doesn’t matter – GenEd forces you to do it either way. This malleability is one of the most fascinating things about Union; it is just what you make of it – nothing more, nothing less – and there will indeed remain deep-seated imprints on the shape of Union College left by the Class of 2009.

More significantly, however, I have come to understand that Union College is more than what we make of it for ourselves. Union must also be what we make of it for others. This is a lesson I managed to learn in a regrettable manner. I remember quite vividly an atmosphere of discord and frustration permeating the campus during my first year. A rally was being held outside of the library, where hundreds of vocal and impassioned students were coming together to voice their opposition to ignorance and intolerance.

From what I am told, the rally was an incredible sight. Where was I? Asleep in my room in West, taking a nap to recover from a long night of homework. While it may seem like a trivial act, as it did at the time, such lapses in judgment serve to undermine the community we should be continually striving to create at Union College. We have a responsibility to support our classmates – not only our friends or our fraternity brothers, but most especially those with whom we are unfamiliar or perhaps share little.

I believe these notions are reflected quite clearly in the futures we have before us. We are leaving this pristine, shielded bubble known as Union College – walking away from meal plans and housing lotteries, and entering a world full of new opportunities to be pursued. Indeed, life is exactly what you make of it – nothing more, nothing less. Sure, you might have been forced to take the only job you got called back for after twenty-five different applications. But the prospects of making that into something incredible and worthwhile are boundless. Do you have some kind of great idea, something you’ve wanted to see in this world so badly you could taste it? This is your chance to seize that moment and work unremittingly toward a goal limited only by your imagination. I challenge each of you to seek out those opportunities and to make the most of them.

However, our focus and attention cannot be placed solely upon ourselves. The world is too large and its crises are too numbered to be simply ignored. While it may be full of promise for those who are able to take hold of it, the world is also plagued by instability, discrimination, disease, and many hardships too great and complex to be easily enumerated. Even here at Union, we are surrounded by a city with its own difficulties, waiting perhaps for an individual with a brilliant mind and an unrestrained determination to do great things.

It seems to be a common theme in these speeches to say “good luck.” I won’t be doing that today. In my estimation, we in attendance already possess enormous amounts of good luck. We are fortunate enough to graduate from an esteemed institution of higher learning, while many receive no education at all. We may someday be fortunate enough to live safely in cities like New York, Boston, or London, while a quiet, unrepresented number in these places are unsure of which alley to sleep in each night. We are fortunate enough to live in one of the most secure and developed nations in the world, while distant poverty-stricken countries devolve into civil war.

I remind you of these things not to depress you – today is a day of celebration, and rightly so. Rather, I say these things to press you a bit further to apply what you have learned at Union, both inside and outside of the classroom. As with Union College, this world is certainly what we make of it for ourselves, but more importantly, it is what we make of it for others. As you leave this ceremony and enter the dreaded Real World, I challenge you to internalize this reality, and to be mindful of it as you carve out your doubtlessly remarkable futures. Think of this as the GenEd of real life – it might be at times a burdensome responsibility to be so cognizant of others, but the difference it makes is incalculable.

Thank you very much, and congratulations to the Class of 2009.

Read More

Valedictorian, salutatorian, student speaker

Posted on Jun 8, 2009

Valedictorian

Valedictorian Daniel C. Bailey

Name: Daniel C. Bailey

Hometown: Mount Vision, N.Y.

Major: Bachelor of Science in chemistry, minor in biology

Activities: Among his many achievements, the intramural soccer and softball player presented research at the American Chemical Society meeting in Utah this March and interned for two summers with Albany Molecular Research Inc. A member of Phi Beta Kappa and associate member of the scientific research honor society Sigma Xi, Bailey also coordinated Chemistry Club outreach with area school children. His junior year, the Sigma Phi brother and Chemistry Help Center tutor studied abroad in Australia and New Zealand.

Plans after graduation: Bailey will begin work as a chemical development scientist at Roche Carolina Inc., a division of Roche Pharmaceuticals. He also hopes to pursue either a medical degree or a graduate degree in chemistry.

 

Salutatorian Steven M. Herron

Salutatorian

Name: Steven M. Herron

Hometown: Ridgefield, Conn.

Major: Bachelor of Science in chemistry, minors in math and physics

Activities: During his tenure at the College, Herron has passionately studied not only the sciences, but music and Spanish as well. An indoor/outdoor track pole vault athlete, he also played ultimate Frisbee and spent a term abroad in Seville, Spain. Herron’s been active in Chemistry Club as well, and is a member of Sigma Pi Sigma, Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma Xi.

Plans after graduation: Herron will serve with Passionist Volunteers building homes in West Virginia for the summer, after which he will begin pursuing his Ph.D. in chemistry at Stanford University. While there, he will research clean sources of alternative energy, principally solar.

 

Student Speaker

Student speaker Sean Mulkerne

Name: Sean D. Mulkerne

Hometown: Whitesboro, N.Y.

Major: Bachelor of Arts in political science, minor in history

Activities: The Union Scholar and Sigma Phi Society brother graduates with a 3.93 GPA and Dean’s List recognition. A member of Phi Beta Kappa, Pi Sigma Alpha, and Phi Alpha Theta, Mulkerne spent a term abroad in York, United Kingdom and interned for Human Rights First in Washington, D.C. In 2007, he attended the Student Conference of US Affairs at West Point. At Union, he has served as Minerva Council Student Representative for Sorum House, a Writing Center tutor, and an Orientation Advisor.

Plans after graduation: Mulkerne will attend the London School of Economics and Political Science where he’ll pursue a Masters of Science in global politics.

Read Mulkerne’s speech here.

Read More

Martin Perl awarded honorary degree at commencement

Posted on Jun 8, 2009

Martin L. Perl, winner of the Nobel Prize in physics, was awarded an honorary doctorate of science at commencement Sunday, June 14, 2009.

Perl was nominated for the honor by Jay Newman, the R. Gordon Gould Professor of Physics, and Michael Vineyard, the Frank and Marie Louise Bailey Professor of Physics.

Martin L. Perl, a Nobel Prize winner who took two post-graduate courses at Union, speaks at Commencement 2009.

A year after graduating in 1948 from Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, Perl became a chemical engineer for the General Electric Co. in Schenectady.

Working in the electron tube production factory led him to what he considers a major turning point in his life – taking atomic physics and advanced calculus at Union to deepen his understanding of electron vacuum tubes.

“I got to know a wonderful physics professor, Vladimir Rojansky,” Perl writes in his official biographical statement. “One day he said to me ‘Martin, what you are interested in is called physics, not chemistry!’ At the age of 23, I finally decided to begin the study of physics.”

Perl received his Ph.D. in 1955 from Columbia University, where he studied under Professor I.I. Rabi, winner of the 1944 Nobel Prize in physics. Perl spent eight years teaching physics at the University of Michigan before joining the faculty at Stanford in 1963, where is now a professor emeritus.

In 1975, while working with a research team at the Stanford Positron-Electron Asymmetric Ring, Perl discovered a new elementary particle, which he named the “tau.”

The tau lepton is a superheavy cousin of the electron, the carrier of electrical current in household appliances.

In 1995, Perl equaled the achievement of his mentor Rabi when he was awarded the Nobel Prize in physics for his discovery.

Read More

Union hosts national conference on engineering and the liberal arts

Posted on Jun 5, 2009

A cultural reconciliation between the humanities and the sciences is critical if graduates are to succeed in an increasingly technological world, the president of Rollins College said Friday at a national conference on engineering and the liberal arts.

Lewis M. Duncan, president of Rollins College, speaks during the second symposium on engineering and liberal arts Friday in the Nott.

“An understanding of technology and its influence on our society and the human condition has never been a more essential element of liberal learning,” Lewis M. Duncan told more than two dozen academic leaders from some of the nation’s top schools at the conference hosted by Union.

“In this complex, modern world, a truly liberal education liberates the minds of our graduates so that they will be not merely informed spectators, but rather engaged participants in the great issues, debates and challenges that define their times," Duncan said in his talk, "The Illiberal Art of Engineering."

Duncan, the former dean and professor of the Thayer School of Engineering at Dartmouth College, applauded those colleges and universities who have integrated engineering, technology and the liberal arts. He urged more schools to break down traditional barriers between the disciplines to produce graduates, so that “theirs must not simply be a life of the mind, but also a life that is mindful.”

The two-day conference Friday and Saturday marks the second straight year Union has hosted a national conversation on engineering and the liberal arts. Among the participants: Princeton, Dartmouth, Harvard, Smith, Lafayette and the U.S. Military Academy.

The theme of this year’s conference is “Educating the Stewards of a Sustainable Future.”

 

In addition to Duncan, other speakers included Diane P. Michelfelder, professor of philosophy at Macalester College and president for the Society for Philosophy and Technology; and Braden R. Allenby, professor of civil and environmental engineering, and of law at Arizona State University, and president of the International Society for Industrial Ecology. Union President Stephen C. Ainlay gave opening remarks.

College President Stephen Ainlay speaks in the Nott Friday morning during the second symposium on engineering and libral arts

A series of breakout sessions and discussions will be held in the Nott Memorial and the F.W. Olin Center.

In 1845, Union became the first liberal arts college to offer engineering in response to the needs of a nation characterized by rapid industrial and urban growth.

“We have to develop the competencies in our students that are needed by the leadership teams of the future,” said Cherrice A. Traver, dean of engineering at Union. “The complex challenges facing humanity and the earth demand that the concept of a liberal education include familiarity with technology as well as the more traditional ‘liberal arts’ fields.”

The symposium is funded in part by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation of New York City and the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation.

For more information, click here.

Read More

Making a solid difference: Senior builds green garden shed

Posted on Jun 5, 2009

David Sanders ’09 wanted his senior project to be solid and make a solid difference.

“I’ve written so many papers in my life, I wanted to do something tangible,” said Sanders, a political science major. “That’s why I chose to build the tool shed.”

David Sanders, Class of 2009, leans on a “green” shed he built near Octopus's Garden. The shed uses straw bails as insulation.

The new 110-square-foot structure fittingly occupies a corner patch of grass beside Octopus’s Garden. Like the garden, the shed’s all about sustainability and was built with earth-friendly materials and practices.

“My first source of inspiration for this was my stepfather,” Sanders said before giving a presentation to a small crowd Thursday outside McKean House. “A green architect, he built our home in the D.C. area three years ago and incorporated some of the same green building practices I used here.

“Professor Mohammad Mafi was also an inspiration to me, I learned a lot from his green building class.”

The shed, which Sanders started constructing in late March, features south-facing windows for natural light and warmth, earthen plaster siding, salvaged doors and windows, and sustainably grown timber.

Most of wood used is certified by the Forest Stewardship Council, meaning it was harvested at the same rate it was grown. The rest of it came from a former stage in Old Chapel.

“The shed also has walls insulated with straw bales,” Sanders said. “Straw is a waste product of grain production and it’s very efficient as insulation.”

Before he leaves Union, headed either for Congressman Paul Tonko’s office or an internship with the Sustainability Institute in South Africa, Sanders will add a rainwater capture system to the shed’s roof. This will trap and store rain, which can then be used to irrigate Octopus’s Garden.

A strawbail insulated shed near Octopus's Garden. Built largely by David Sanders, Class of 2010.

“I’m really pleased with the way this little building turned out,” Sanders said. “There’s so much waste out there, and if we can take this waste and make something new, that’s what being green is all about.”

Sanders’s efforts were supported by a Presidential Green Grant, the Minerva program and the Intellectual Enrichment Fund.

“It really takes a community to accomplish things, and so many people supported David in this,” said Associate Professor of political science Robert Hislope, Sanders's project advisor.

Read More