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Posted on Mar 29, 2010

A poem by Senior Director of Campus Diversity and Affirmative Action Gretchel Hathaway is included in the spring issue of “Making Connections: Interdisciplinary Approaches to Cultural Diversity,” a journal published by Bloomsburg University in Bloomsburg, Penn. Hathaway shared her piece with students at a poetry slam at Union. The poem is titled “Perceptions on Teaching Tolerance.”  Another poem by Gretchel Hathaway, Ahh Dear Keats, was published online this week by The Chronicle of Higher Education.


Hilary Tann,
the John Howard Payne Professor of Music, took part in a recent performance by early music ensemble Cappella Clausura in Brattleboro, Vt. The performance, “Messa Paschale: Sacred Music by Women Composers” helped the Friends of Music at Guilford celebrate the long and rich history of female composers. Tann gave a pre-concert talk with live recorded samples of her work. In addition to “Messa Paschale,” a rarely heard Easter mass by the 17th century Benedictine nun Chiara Margarita Cozzolani, Cappella Clausura presented Tann’s “Psalm 136.”


Andrew Morris,
associate professor of history, recently presented a program on Japanese Internment during World War II at Schenectady County Public Library. His talk, titled “The Causes and Consequences of the Incarceration of Japanese Americans,” was part of the Town & Gown Program that ties in with the county’s “One County, One Book” reading program. This year’s book is “Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet" by Jamie Ford.

“Small Wonders,” an exhibit featuring the perspective boxes of Charles Steckler, is on view at the Butzel Gallery, John Sayles School of Fine Arts, Schenectady, through April 9. Steckler is professor of theater and resident scenic designer.

A four-part conversation with Assistant Professor of Political Science Bradley Hays on a range of congressional issues aired on WAMC recently. To listen, click on Part 1 (the health care bill and its high stakes for House Democrats); Part 2 (marginal Democrats and the difficulty the health care bill brought them); Part 3 (President Obama’s political capital); and Part 4 (Obama’s influence on the Supreme Court). WAMC serves parts of seven northeastern states, including New York, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Vermont, New Jersey, New Hampshire and Pennsylvania.

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Job hopes brighten for college grads

Posted on Mar 29, 2010

Bob Soules, director of the Becker Career Center, was recently interviewed about the job prospects for college graduates.

To read the article in the Times Unionclick here (registration may be required).

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Two named Watson Fellows

Posted on Mar 26, 2010

Frederick Franke, Watson nominee

In case you missed the news over break, two Union students were named Watson Fellows, a prestigious honor granted to 40 college seniors nationwide from a competitive pool of 150 applicants.

As recipients of the Thomas J. Watson Fellowship, Frederick Franke ’10 and James Morton ’10 will receive a one-year stipend of $25,000 to study independently outside the United States.

Franke, an interdepartmental history and political science major from Annapolis, Md., will research the intimate connection between food and culture in “Out of the Kitchen and Into the Fire: Exploring the World’s Open-fire Cooking Methods.”

He will apprentice himself to open-fire cooks around the world, studying the hangi method of cooking in New Zealand, tandoor in India, braai in South Africa, doner kebap in Turkey and jerk in Jamaica.

James Morton, Watson nominee

Morton’s project, “Large Format Cargo: Photographing the Shipping Industry,” will take him to ports and shipyards in Australia, India and South Korea. A history and environmental science major from Orient Point, L.I., and grandson of a merchant mariner, Morton grew up with a love of photography and the sea.

“We are so proud of our winners,” said History Professor Joyce Madancy, chair of the College’s Watson Fellowship Committee. “It’s especially thrilling to have two more Watson Fellows on campus.”

The newest fellows come from 23 states and three foreign countries. For a complete list of winners and their project, click here.

 

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Students do a SuperPower job for new museum display

Posted on Mar 26, 2010

Superpower exhibit – from left to right are Rhonda Becker, Prof. Jim Hedrick, Lindsey Walaski, Pete DiSalvio, Krystle Gallo, Denly Lettsome, Demarcus Hamm, Jim Walker, Sam Barstow, and Prof. Becky Cortez

Members of Union’s mechanical and electrical engineering departments offered some hands-on, technical expertise recently by designing and building part of a new exhibit on superconducting technology at the Schenectady Museum and Suits-Bueche Planetarium.

The new display, “Superconducting City of Lights” was part of the 10th anniversary celebration of SuperPower, Inc., a leader in the development of second-generation high temperature superconductors and related devices.

“This was a fantastic opportunity for our students to work together on an interdisciplinary project, to put many organizational and team project skills taught in the classroom into action,” said Rebecca Cortez, assistant professor of mechanical engineering.

In addition to Cortez, the team included James Hedrick, senior lecturer in electrical engineering, Rhonda Becker, Mechanical Engineering Department administrative assistant, and students Sam Barstow '11, Peter DiSalvio ’11, Krystle Gallo ’12, Demarcus Hamm ’10, Denly Lettsome ’11, Stephen Sanchez ’11, Lindsey Walaski ’10 and James Walker ’10. 

Superpower exhibit – from left to right are Krystle Gallo, Peter DiSalvio, and Sam Barstow. The students are attaching the lights to the boards of the city’s buildings.

They worked together in small groups for more than a month.

“The experience was amazing,” said Lettsome, an electrical engineering major. “It was true ‘real-world’ engineering work – working with other engineers in different fields, updating each other based on progress, sharing different ideas on what we should do next to make it better, and of course, deadlines. I applied engineering principles I've been studying since freshman year.”

“There was a lot of brainstorming," said mechanical engineering major Gallo. "We learned we would be building a city that would light up in different ways when buttons were pressed to simulate their products. We spent a great deal of time planning what each button would do, what the city would be made out of, how we would wire it."

Sperpower exhibit – Demarcus Hamm is soldering a board for the display. (Denly Lettsome is behind him).

Using LED Christmas lights, Gallo said, "we worked on plotting out where the lights would be placed into the boards, drilling the holes, and cutting the boards so that they would fit correctly. It was amazing to see the final product at the museum, working perfectly. The opening was a huge success.” 

“Superconducting City of Lights” is a permanent interactive display in the museum’s “Power House” exhibit, which will be open to the public throughout the year.  

Union has partnered with SuperPower since 2006 to help develop a workforce  for its commercial production of superconducting wire. Among the community and government leaders who helped mark the anniversary milestone was U.S. Rep. Paul Tonko (D-NY).

 

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Pianist Bronfman performs at Memorial Chapel

Posted on Mar 25, 2010

Yefim Bronfman

Renowned pianist Yefim Bronfman brings his commanding technique and exceptional lyrical gifts to Memorial Chapel for his fifth Chamber Concert Series appearance Wednesday, April 7, 8 p.m.

He will present Beethoven’s 32 Variations in C (on an original theme), Schumann’s Faschingschwank aus Wien, Prokofiev’s Sonata No. 2, Op. 14 and Tchaikovsky’s Grand Sonata in G, Op. 37.

Bronfman, who appears regularly with such celebrated ensembles as the Berlin Philharmonic, Israel Philharmonic Orchestra and New York Philharmonic, won the Avery Fisher Prize in 1991. In 1997, he clinched a Grammy Award for his recording of the three Bartok Piano Concertos with Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Los Angeles Philharmonic.

Bronfman was born in the former Soviet Union in 1958 and moved to Israel, where he attended the Rubin Academy of Music at Tel Aviv University. He became a U.S. citizen in 1989, continuing his studies at The Julliard School, Marlboro and Curtis Institute of Music.

Bronfman's performance is free to members of the Union community. General admission tickets are $25; local students may attend for $10. For more, click here.

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