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Exact Spectacular on Display in Nott

Posted on Sep 10, 1999

Mandeville Gallery in the Nott Memorial presents the exhibition An

Exact Spectacular – drawings by Ed Rogers and sculpture by Henry Turner

through Oct. 17.

The show is curated by writer, publisher and collector David Greenberger

of Greenwich, N.Y.

Included are about 120 drawings by Rogers and 49 small-scale wood

sculptures by Turner. Both are “self-taught” or

“outsider” artists with no formal artistic training; their

motivation and frame of reference differ considerably from that of

mainstream, schooled artists. Both men are in their 70s; Rogers lives in a

nursing home near Boston, and Turner was last known to be living in

Schenectady.

Greenberger, called a “stand-up sociologist” by Rolling

Stone magazine, has spent two decades recording observations and

comments by nursing home residents and publishing them in his magazine The

Duplex Planet. He also has been a commentator on National Public Radio's

All Things Considered.

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Augusta Schwab Mourned

Posted on Sep 10, 1999

Augusta A. Schwab, a longtime trustee of the College, died Aug. 12 at her

home in Bryn Mawr, Pa.

A graduate of Smith College, she was involved in many community

activities in the Schenectady area before moving to Bryn Mawr in 1993,

including the local chapter of the American Red Cross, the Girls Club, the

Child Guidance Center, the Carver Community Center, the Junior League, and

the Fort Orange Garden Club.

She was elected to Union's board in 1978 and became a trustee emerita

in 1986. She was a devoted supporter of crew at Union, and one of the

College's racing shells is named the “Augusta A. Schwab” in her

honor.

Her family has extensive connections to the College. Her father, the Rev.

H. Laurence Achilles, former director of religious education at Union, was

the major benefactor of Achilles Rink. A brother, the late H. Laurence

Achilles, Jr., graduated from Union in 1938, and a grandson, Peter,

graduated in 1993.

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Columnist Katha Pollitt to speak at Union College on Oct. 27

Posted on Sep 10, 1999

Katha Pollitt, feminist author, poet, and columnist for The Nation will give a talk titled “Why I Hate Family Values” on Monday, October 27 in Union College's Nott Memorial at 7:30 p.m.

Pollitt's “Subject to Debate” column appears every other week in The Nation and has been called by the Washington Post “the best place to go for original thinking on the left.” The column is also frequently reprinted in newspapers across the country.

Critics have raved about Pollitt's book, Reasonable Creatures: Essays on Women and Feminism, published in 1994. The New York Times Book Review said: “Funny and furious … Pollitt takes on the most compelling issues of our day concerning the sexes and turns them upside down. Along with her razor-sharp wit and her impatience with sound-bite solutions, what sets Ms. Pollitt apart from other feminist writers is her concern for social justice …. Cunning and complex.”

Pollitt is the winner of several writing awards, and her essays and poems have appeared in The New Yorker, The Atlantic, The New Republic, Harper's, and The New York Times, among others.

The lecture is free and open to the public. A reception, sponsored by the Women's Commission of Union College, will be held in Old Chapel immediately following the talk. The sixteen-sided Nott Memorial is located at the center of campus and parking is available on campus and on nearby sidestreets.

For more information, call 388-6131.

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Union-Schenectady Initiative on track

Posted on Sep 1, 1999

Schenectady, NY (Sept. 1, 1999) – Union College's broad-based neighborhood revitalization project, the Union Schenectady Initiative, is “on track” according to Union President Roger Hull. On Sunday, starting at noon, about 100 College juniors and seniors will be moving into their new, apartment-style flats just to the west of campus on Seward Place and Huron Street in the City of Schenectady.

“We made a commitment to our students and to the residents of the City of Schenectady that this project will be completed on time and on budget,” Hull said. “I'm pleased to report that phase one is on schedule. We welcome the return of our students to the College, and just as importantly to this revitalized part of the Initiative area.”

The US Initiative, announced last October, is a $10 million program designed to address the College's need for increased student housing as well as to revitalize the College Park neighborhood to the west of the Union campus. The Initiative includes a number of incentives for both homeowners and Union College employees to purchase homes in the area.

Incentives include the College's commitment of up to $1 million annually in tuition scholarships for children of eligible homeowners, special mortgage programs by Union and Trustco Bank, the renovation of a building in the area to serve as the College Park Community Outreach Center, and the establishment of the College Park Neighborhood Association.

Capital District Physicians Health Plan has joined the effort and contributed $15,000 towards the renovation and upgrade of South Avenue Park, a recreation area in the neighborhood. In addition, the College is renovating a residence on Seward Place to serve as a satellite office of the Union Campus Safety operation. In all, Union has acquired 40 homes in the neighborhood, which will be used for student housing and rental units for College faculty and staff.

The Union Schenectady Initiative Project Status to Date:

Phase One: (October '98 – September '99

The College is wrapping up work on renovating 13 houses: 11 houses on Seward Place and Huron Street will be used for student housing; one on 246, 248-250 Park Place, a nine-unit apartment complex for graduate students, and the Montessori School on Park, which opened this week to full enrollment. By the start of Union's classes on September 6 (end of phase one), 100 students will be living in the College Park neighborhood, on Seward and Huron. (See phase two for total students to live in neighborhood).

The College has hired five general contractors – Plank Construction, Bast-Hatfield, Matzen, Carpenter-Rosland and Duquid & Sons — to complete the Initiative, which, to date, has a total project cost of $5 million: $3 million in buildings that have been acquired and renovated, and $2 million in acquisitions that have yet to be renovated. On average, each G.C. has hired seven subcontractors. In all, well over 100 craftsmen are working double time to get the job done.

Phase Two: (September '99 – January 2000)

Work will continue in September through January on renovating 13 additional homes on Seward and Huron for use as student housing. In all, there will be 17 houses on Seward and 8 on Huron as student residences, and 14 on Park for other College uses, including faculty/staff rentals. There will be a total of 161 total students on Seward and Huron.

The College Park Community Outreach Center, 257 Park Place (formerly the Alps Grill), will be completed in phase two at a cost of approximately $400,000. The Center will sponsor health and wellness workshops by area organizations – St. Clare's and Ellis Hospitals, Girls Inc. — as well as a special homework center, which will feature Union student mentors to help children in the local elementary schools.

The satellite office for Union's Campus Safety operation will be open 24-hours, and will serve as a station for officers and bike patrols. The College will add, this fall, a third bike-patrol officer to the very successful bike patrol initiative initiated last year.

Design work is underway for the rehabilitation of South Avenue Park. Capital District Physicians Health Plan has contributed $15,000 to the project. The Parks Department of the City of Schenectady will also contribute labor to the effort.

Housing: Less than a dozen student athletes have moved into the neighborhood to date, (athletes return to campus early for practice, the remaining students, non-athletes, will move in on Sunday, Sept. 5.) Among the houses on Seward Place and Huron Street, will be four “theme houses,” which are student residences developed around a specific field of interest.

Opening this fall are: Symposium House, where students and faculty will meet for intellectual discussions, films, etc.; a Spanish House; a German House; and Seneca House, for students interested in women's issues and the women's studies program at Union.

Union's first residence for graduate students at 246, 248-250 Park Place will be completed by the weekend. The nine-unit complex will have six two-bedroom apartments and three one-bedroom apartments. The cost to Union is about $300,000. Rents will range from about $350 per month-one bedroom; $400 per month-two beds. This is the first time the College has been able to offer housing for graduate students.

OTHER

Seward Streetscape: The City is developing the design and will fund the Seward Place streetscape project. Infrastructure work will begin this fall – storm sewers, water lines, etc. Spring/summer 2000 completion expected with dual sidewalks, historic lighting, crosswalks, etc.

College relocation program: Union has spent about $30,000 to move 26 households from acquired properties. As part of the relocation program, Union assumed all costs for each tenant move and provided two month's rent for the new address.

Union Mortgage Program: Six, soon to be seven, employees of the College have purchased homes in the area, taking advantage of Union's Community Mortgage program. The program offers employees of the College no down payment, no closing costs and a fixed interest rate two percent below local bank rates.

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For Birthday Parties or Legal Parties; Dividing Things Fairly is Not Always a Piece of Cake

Posted on Aug 7, 1999

You want to cut a cake fairly? Take a knife, count the people at the party, cut the slices and hand them out. Even if the pieces are a bit uneven, who cares? What person above the age of 10 would have the nerve to stop a party and complain that his slice wasn't as big as someone else's? Welcome to the field of fair division. It is full of incipient party poopers: mathematicians, economists, political scientists and mediators who care deeply about cake-cutting, down to the frosting and rosettes.


The field doesn't end with cake. It extends to heirs fighting over their inheritance, ex-spouses haggling over property in a divorce, children shirking chores, pirates splitting their loot, warring parties partitioning land and companies merging.


You would think this kind of thing would have been boiled down to a science by now. Splitting booty, after all, is as old as the Bible. In “The Win-Win Solution: Guaranteeing Fair Shares to Everybody,” Steven J. Brams and Alan D. Taylor recount one of the earliest documented cases of the algorithm (or step-by-step method) for splitting known as “I cut, you choose.” Lot and Abraham are arguing over grazing land. Abraham cuts the land into north and south with this proposal: “Let us separate: If you go north, I will go south; and if you go south, I will go north.” And Lot chooses. The problem of fair division is thousands of years old, but the mathematical theory is still young, according to “Cake-Cutting Algorithms: Be Fair if You Can,” a book by Jack Robertson and William Webb that surveys the known methods of cake cutting. These include moving-knife algorithms (somebody shouts “Stop!” when he thinks a knife that's moving across a cake is hovering over his fair share), dirty-work modifications (for dividing up things nobody wants) and divide-and-conquer algorithms.


The formal theory of fair division began in the 1940's, when three Polish mathematicians — Hugo Steinhaus, Stefan Banach and Bronislaw Knaster — came up with a brilliant question: What happens when it's not two people fighting over a cake, but three? This stumped the world for 20 years. “They realized that it got complicated quite quickly,” said Mr. Taylor, the Marie Louise Bailey Professor of Mathematics at Union College. They found a way to cut the cake proportionally, so that every person would feel that he or she got at least one-third of the cake. But they couldn't insure that one of the cake-eaters would not want to swap his or her piece of cake for someone else's.


This was the problem: Say Tom, Dick and Ann set out to cut a cake into thirds. Tom might cut a slice that he thinks is at least one-third of the cake and then watch as the rest of the cake is split so that Dick gets a bigger piece than his and Ann a smaller one. Tom might feel that he got his proportional share but still envy Dick. The slice would be, in the lingo of fair division, “proportional” but not “envy-free.” It was not until 1960 that two mathematicians, John H. Conway and John L. Selfridge, found a way to guarantee envy-freeness (and proportionality) for three people. (All envy-free solutions are proportional.) Their method also guaranteed crumbs.


Tom cuts the cake into what he thinks are three equal slices. Then Dick sizes up the situation. If he doesn't think the slices are even, he trims the largest slice until he thinks it's same size as the next largest slice. Then the slices are claimed in this order: first Ann, then Dick (who must take the piece he trimmed if Ann didn't take it), then Tom. The problem is what to do with the trimmings. Should they be divided in the same manner? And when do trimmings become worthless crumbs? A variant of the trimming procedure was used after World War II, according to “The Win-Win Solution.” When the Allies partitioned Germany into zones, Berlin was viewed as too valuable a piece to hand over to the Soviet Union even though it was in the Soviet zone. Thus Berlin became the trimmings, leftovers to be further divided.


In the 1990's, Mr. Taylor and Mr. Brams came up with an envy-free way to divide cake among — yes — four people. And if you can cut a cake for four people in an envy-free way, Mr. Taylor says, you can do it for millions. When Mr. Taylor was asked if he could explain it, he said, “Whoa! Not easily.”


Basically it involves cutting extra slices. As the number of cake-eaters increases, the number of slices you have to cut increases exponentially. For four cake-eaters, cut five slices; for five eaters, nine slices; for six, 17 slices; for 22 eaters, more than a million. The trimmings and additional slices are distributed later in an even more complicated way. For all the muss, these algorithms don't always produce satisfied customers. Say one person likes frosting and cake, but another person finds frosting nauseating. If a cake is divided with equal parts frosting and cake for all, the frosting-hater will see that the person who likes both cake and frosting is happier. The frosting-hater doesn't want the other person's slice; he wants that person's happiness with his slice.


That is, there is more to a truly great cut than envy-freeness and proportionality. There's the gloating quotient. If you really want to be fair, you have to insure that no one feels happier with his slice than anyone else. (This is called an “equitable” distribution.) And if you want to dole out the maximum amount of happiness, you should also make sure no other division would make things better for one party without making it worse for another. (This is called an “efficient” division.)


Oddly enough, the more people disagree about what's tasty in a cake, the easier it is to make everyone happy. If one person adores frosting but not cake and the other loves cake but not frosting, you can make both happy by giving one frosting, the other the cake.


The question is how to produce wonderful cuts where some tastes overlap and others don't. The first step is to stop talking about cake. Instead of looking at a single item, like a cake, look at piles of things, like property in a divorce.


In “The Win-Win Solution,” Mr. Brams and Mr. Taylor describe their new algorithm to help two parties — countries, divorces, siblings, companies — divide in a way that's envy-free (and thus proportional), equitable and efficient. It is called adjusted winner, or A.W., and the authors have already patented it, just to avoid getting into a little property dispute of their own. (As far as the authors know, this is the first patent for a method of resolving disputes.)


This is how A.W. works. Two parties list all the items and issues to be divided. Each one gets 100 points to spend on the things listed, spending the most points on those things the player values most. Each player wins (at least temporarily) the items that he has placed more points on than his opponent. Then the adjustments begin. Both players add up the number of points they have spent for the things they have got. If one party has more, they start transferring items back and forth (and sometimes dividing them or cashing them in for money) until their point totals are identical.


“Generally, it pays to be honest about what your valuations are” when using this algorithm, said Mr. Brams, a professor of politics at New York University. And of course it also pays to keep your valuations a secret from your opponent. Otherwise he could spite you by, say, putting just one more point on something he knows you want.


“The more different the preferences, the more both gain,” Mr. Brams says. Applying the A.W. method to Donald and Ivana Trump's divorce, Mr. Brams and Mr. Taylor calculated that both would have won nearly 75 percent of what they wanted because their preferences were so different. She wanted the Connecticut estate and the Trump Plaza apartment. He wanted the Palm Beach mansion and the Trump Tower triplex. If A.W. had been applied to the Camp David peace talks, Egypt and Israel would have each gotten about 65 percent of what they wanted.


That sounds wonderful, but fittingly for a field that deals with disputes, there is some dispute about whether A.W. really promotes harmony. Roger Fisher, who wrote “Getting to Yes: Negotiating Agreement Without Giving In” with William Ury, is troubled. “A point system,” he said, “takes the articles in conflict as fixed, and that's not necessarily good for any relationship.” In mediation, he says, “emotional needs are often more important than material wants.”


For example, in a diplomatic dispute, perhaps one country wants an apology rather than land in a diplomatic dispute. In an estate settlement, maybe one person wants the summer house only for July and another person wants mother's dress only for her wedding. Mr. Taylor said that it doesn't matter what is being divided up — apologies, sovereignty or wearing mother's dress for a day — as long as everything is put on the list.


Mr. Fisher still has doubts. He said that a point system can help heirs divide antiques but doesn't produce creative solutions for complicated political conflicts. “Apologizing and showing respect, tolerance, understanding and openness to the ideas of others,” he said, “are not units to which partisans can easily assign mathematical points.” The adversarial and secretive nature of the method can work against peace too. In negotiation, it's better to ''play with the cards face up,” to make all your wants clearly known, he said. “The biggest concern is to eliminate the idea that your partner in negotiation is your enemy.” “Most of the world is not made better by dividing things,” Mr. Fisher says. All the secretiveness and jockeying is okay if the parties are going to “live on different planets,” he says. But it's no way to produce harmony and end war. “God bless them if they can find a mathematical solution for that.” Cake, anyone?

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Union names 628 to dean’s list

Posted on Aug 2, 1999

 

Schenectady, N.Y. (August 2, 1999) – Union College has named 628 students to the dean's list for the 1998-99 academic year.

In order to be named to the dean's list at Union, a student must have attended classes for the entire academic year and completed three courses during each of the three terms with no fewer than eight courses in the index. He or she must have maintained an overall index of 3.35 or greater.

Students are listed by state (or country), county, and city.

Alabama

Madison County
Owens Crossroads: Barry M. Eisenberg

California

Los Angeles County
Diamond Bar: Aakash Agarwala
Norwalk: Anup J. Patel
Rosemead: Pakk-Shing Hui

Orange County
Fountain Valley: Michael F. De Micco

San Diego County
La Jolla: Claire C. Currie, Irene O. Kan
San Diego: Avishkar Tyagi

Santa Barbara County
Santa Barbara: Kirsten B. Lauber

Colorado

Pitkin County
Aspen: Kelly E. Stewart

Connecticut

Fairfield County
Fairfield: Andrew P. Stone
Shelton: Maureen C. Farrell
Stamford: Kathleen M. Ruggiero
Weston: Robyn M. Polansky
Westport: Peter J. Castiglia
Wilton: Harry K. Welsh

Hartford County
Avon: Kate E. Golden
East Hartford: Mark Lee Anderson
Farmington: Kimberly A. Rohback
Manchester: Andrew G. Dorin
Newington: Sarah J. Shoemaker
Simsbury: Robert L. Lindholm
West Hartford: Pamela M. Green, Michael S. Pilo, Wayne L. Roffer, Michael J. Slitt

Litchfield County
Torrington: Matthew J. Simmons
Watertown: Matthew J. Mauriello
Woodbury: Katherine M. Anthony

Middlesex County
Chester: Fenna M. Calder
Cromwell: Daniela A. Chiulli
Middletown: Michelle R. Tardif

New Haven County
Cheshire: Marin E. Richardson, Michael P. Votto
Guilford: George W. Kosturko
Madison: Jamie M. Manganello, Lisa A. Pertoso, Lindsay I. Simon
Waterbury: Christina A. Biello
Woodbridge: Charles E. Clark, Natasha K. D'Souza

New London County
Colchester: Philip B. Herman
Old Lyme: Sarah K. Rosen

Tolland County
Tolland: Averi E. Pakulis

District of Columbia
Washington: Vanvimon Saksmerprome

Delaware

New Castle County
Hockessin: Cristina M. Baldassari

Florida

Collier County
Naples: Jeremy A. Lynch, Kathleen A. Meloney

Indian River County
Vero Beach: Farhan J. Khawaja

Palm Beach County
Boynton Beach: Rosalie K. Barr

Pinellas County
Tarpon Springs: Ravikiran Korabathina

Sarasota County
Sarasota: Caroline R. Hepner

Georgia

Cobb County
Marietta: Kimberly A. Kilby

Illinois

Cook County
Chicago: Carrie J. Middleton
Glenview: Jonathan H. Chung, Adam-Paul Smolak

Kane County
St. Charles: Kathleen M. Klemm

Saint Clair County
East Saint Louis: Jay T. Varady

Indiana

Marion County
Indianapolis: Risheet R. Patel

Massachusetts

Framingham: Whitney B. Davis

Barnstable County
Brewster: Cori M. Kautz
Centerville: Sarah B. Rome
Orleans: Katherine B. Porter

Berkshire County
Adams: Jill E. Grant, Jaime L. Lapine, Glenna M. Malcolm
Dalton: Kevin P. Carter, Corey W. Mathis
Lee: Alan M. Hebert
North Adams: Jennifer M. Breen, Peter J. Melito
Pittsfield: Amanda J. Carr, Jamie L. Finkelstein, Tania Magoon, Debra T. Pellish

Bristol County
No. Easton: Jessica A. Goveia
North Attleboro: William H. Servant
North Easton: Michael K. Yoon

Essex County
Andover: David M. Chapin, Bridget C. Fallon, Randi J. Spiegel
Beverly: George N.J. Sommer
Gloucester: Elizabeth W. McNeill, Susanna D. Ryan
Groveland: Jeffrey T. Guptill
Haverhill: Regan M. Buckley, Kellie J. Forrestall
Lynnfield: Lauren A. Brecher
Marblehead: Jennifer M. Chapman, Cass A. Ciavarra, Mindy A. Cohen, Randi H. Dupont, Monica A. Greenman, Emily M. Sparks
North Andover: Diana Voskoboynik
Peabody: Fioravante L. Leo, Eric M. Nathanson
Salem: Jeffrey R. Simard
West Newbury: Christopher E. DiStefano

Franklin County
Erving: Tara L. Noyes
South Deerfield: Nicole C. Rabideau

Hampden County
Feeding Hills: Andrew E. Markowski
Hampden: Autumn H. Renn
Longmeadow: Jaclyn F. Brittman, Jason M. Kellman, Emily V. Sturgis
Springfield: Erin L. Fitzpatrick, Shannon C. Powers
West Springfield: Shana M. Dangelo
Westfield: Scott D. Halla, Bethany M. Machacek, Julia M. Naftulin, Candice H. Tillman

Hampshire County
Southampton: Catherine O'Reilly

Middlesex County
Ashland: Natalie Gulden, David E. Waldstein
Chelmsford: Jennifer L. Medeiros
Concord: Jacob Allen-Fahlander, Johanna E. Gluck, Jessica L. Grande
Framingham: Louisa D. Stephens
Lexington: Maura R. Woessner
Lincoln: Sarah E. Kanner
Littleton: Christina A. Rizzitano
Natick: Timothy C. Lane, Sherry H. Moskowitz, Rachel B. Parnes
Newton: Garrett B. Brown, Peter A. Flynn, Lindsay J. Goodman, Jessica S. Jackson
Stoneham: Kafi N. Sanders
W. Newton: Evan P. Apfelbaum
Watertown: Alfred C. Papali
West Newton: Sorelle B. Berger
Westford: Meghanne McClendon
Weston: Devon L. Ciampa

Norfolk County
Avon: Amanda J. Famolare
Braintree: Jennifer B. Pelose
Brookline: Caroline L. Hardy
Holbrook: Kathleen C. Robins
Milton: Gillian M. Blake, Ryan D. Martinson
Needham: Amy B. Gersten, Peter A. Malaspina, Jason M. Rosenstock
Sharon: Raffaella R. Murano
Walpole: Brooke M. Barylick
Westwood: Meredith J. Chace, Devon M. Flaherty, Jorie A. Kelly

Plymouth County
Belmont: Erica J. Fisher
Bridgewater: Jonathan J. Kelson
Brockton: Sarah E. Burman
Brookline: Mireille A. Blau
Chestnut Hill: David A. Gould
Hingham: Lisa P. Blaustein, Robert M. Petrie
Marshfield: Susan L. Joyal
Mattapoisett: Hilary L. Prouty
Needham: Donald T. Duvall, Dana Linde, Marissa G. Reisman
Norwell: Meghan K. O'Keefe
Scituate: Jon M. Tower

Worcester County
Northborough: Beth A. Gabriel
Princeton: Sean R. Spindler-Ranta
Westborough: Beth L. Syat
Worcester: Carin Litani, Molly H. Shaner

Maryland

Harford County
Bel Air: Jessica L. Stephens

Howard County
Ellicott City: Heather H. Campbell

Montgomery County
Potomac: Julia L. Barkin, Jeffrey M. Movshin, Nandini D. Patel, Joshua A. Varon

Maine

Aroostook County
Fort Kent: John W. Carbone

Cumberland County
New Gloucester: Abigail M. Marks

Kennebec County
Waterville: Hilary M. Fitts

Lincoln County
Pemaquid: Robert D. Rapp

Oxford County
Rumford: Pamela D. Saxton

Sagadahoc County
Bath: David M. Searles

York County
Cape Neddick: Courtney E. Audet

Michigan:

Midland County:

Midland: George R. Verghese

Washtenaw County:

Ann Arbor: Alissa B. Riba: Mary K. Aspnes, Colin R. Breyer

 

Minnesota:

Dakota County:

Saint Paul: Michelle J. Stein

Hennepin County:

Minneapolis

Wayzata: David S. Poindexter

 

: Martiqua L. Post: Hillary R. Olk

 

Missouri:

Saint Louis County:

Saint Louis

 : Melissa A. Sullivan: Leah A. Kalfas

North Carolina:

County:

Advance

 

New Hampshire:

Belknap County:

Alton

 

: Remigiusz R. Drozd

Laconia: Kathryn A. Johnson

Meredith: Leigh A. Moriarty

 

: Julie A. Seymour

 

: Molly E. Hood

 

: Thomas J. Higgins

Pelham: Bryan E. Groulx

 

: Christopher C. Heath

Concord: Jessica M. Audet, James D. Cahill, Emily F. Gewehr, Courtney L. Randall

 

: Sharon A. Pozner

 : Shira A. Ackerman

New Jersey:

Bergen County:

Edgewater

 

: Alexander L. Panlilio, Joelle A. Tisch

Fair Lawn: Steven M. Borer, Anna Kertser

Harrington Park: Jamie B. Bunchuk

 

: Susan L. Drossman

 

: Henri C. Clinch

 

: Rachel E. Dominguez, Amanda L. Graye

 

: Melinda Colon

Saddle River: Michelle F. Feingold

 

: Elizabeth Glidden

 

: Orit A. Manham

Wyckoff: Allison J. Bergman, Edward B. Wallace

 

:

Bordentown B: Cameron E. Sutter

Marlton: Amie B. Csiszer

 

:

Cherry Hill: Floren S. Robinson

 

: Benjamin E. Parker

Irvington: Anthony B. Ndu

 

: Lawrence J. Gutman

 

:

Califon: Rebecca Schwartz

 

:

 

: Richard J. Simmons

 

: Thinesh Dahanayake

 

:

East Brunswick: Spencer A. Wanderer

North Brunswick: Jared E. Schulman

 

:

 

: James N. Rozakis

 

: Mani A. Daneshmand

Marlboro: Corey S. Greenhouse

 

:

Mendham: Charles W. Robertson

 

: Jennifer Trotts

 

: Joshua R. Elias

 

: Pamela Grover, Chad B. Simon

 

:

 

: Joseph Attanasio

 

:

 

: Sarah F. Ahart: Heather L. Clements, David F. DeMase, Kathleen L. Farrell, Jody E. Frampton, Ivy S. Ip, Liam B. Joynt, Stephen J. Kampf, Shannon J. Lawlor, Charity McManaman, Michael T. Mulligan, Colleen E. Strait, Justine M. Willey

 

New York:

Albany County:

Albany

 

: Paul A. La Crosse

 

: Duncan C. Crary, Michael J. D'Aleo, Katherine F. MacDowell

 

: Jessica A. Sengenberger

 

Stephen D. Ayers

 

: Maria Stamoulis, Caley A. Vagianelis

 

: Annette M. Grajny, John R. Popp

 

: Joellen M. Gadomski, Deana M. Grattan, Mary H. Hayes, Lori B. Malinoski, Sarah P. Sportman

 

: Elaine V. Borja, Mario Cruz, Kemoy K. Foster, Midys Inoa, Julissa M. Rosario

 

: Michalena M. Skiadas

 

: Christine E. Douglas, Erica M. Schwarzbauer, Heather L. Weisenfluh

 

: Jennifer K. Brate

 

: Katherine G. Brady, Thomas A. Jenne

 

: Alexander W. Chase

Plattsburgh: Roger L. Noyes

 

: Jill L. Weiner

 

: Ryan T. Almstead, Francesco A. Queirolo

 

: Erika M. Mancini

 

: Andrew T. Coats

 

: Seville M. Meli

LaGrangeville: Jesse J. Prisco

Pawling: Paula M. Denema

 

: Julian E. Goldstein

Red Hook: Yvonne M. Turchetti

 

: Michaela A. Cautela, Michael Monarchi

Verbank: Sara B. Place

 

: Rachel M. Bukowski

 

: Christine M. Bower

 

: Kellie A. Downey

Orchard Park: Emilie A. Ruglis

 

: Sarah L. Harsh

 

: Claire E. Cantwell

Tupper Lake: Danielle M. Marquis

 

: Tracy L. Fogarty

 

: Loren E. Cole, Anna E. Hurst, Amy M. Pedrick, Bella A. Prumo, Calvin R. Robinson, Alissa M. Ryder

Saint Johnsville: Richard L. Hart, Sara A. Hart

 

:

 

: Mary C. Nichols

 

: Erika A. Migliaccio

 

: Mary B. Grose

 

: Allison D. Graziadei, Francis P. Maxwell, Samuel J. Salamone

 

: Radney H. Wood

 

:

 

: Clare E. Canal, Amanda Diamondstein, Adam D. Jacobowitz, Ricardo A. Laremont, Sofia Mazo, Bernice Polanco

 

: Shannon E. Arthur, Neal C. VanPatten

De Ruyter: Jill C. Bowden

 

: Crystal A. Hilton

 

:

 

: Ilana A. Eck, Richard J. Fox, Gregory P. Fox

 

: Daniel A. Cox, Sonia K. Gupta, Ryan S. Lee

 

: Rachel A. Lawrence, Kurt W. Martel, Leah A. Oliveiri, Michael R. Webb

 

:

 

: Cregg M. Brown, Kristie M. Centi, Melanie M. Douglass, Jeremy R. Newell, Amber L. Vosko

Esperance: Deidre L. Palmer

 

: William A. Smullen

Fort Plain: Carrie L. Heroth

 

: Kylie S. Petterson

 

:

Albertson: Julie S. Senreich

 

: Jacqueline H. Eatz

 

: Ryan P. Nespeca

Glen Cove: Lilith Amado, Shannon E. Pryor

 

: Li-Hsin Wang

Malverne: Caroline E. Fink

Massapequa Park: George C. Edwards, Kristin M. Thomson

 

: Gary S. Schwartz

 

: Shana A. Kleinman

New Hyde Park: Aimee C. Zullo

Oceanside: Raquel A. Millman

 

: Devaraj Pyne

Port Washington: Janci L. Karp

Rockville Centre: Kate Cimini, Roger L. McShane

 

: Puja R. Mahindra, Sameer A. Sayeed, Sloane B. Silver

Roslyn Heights: Farah N. Lalani

 

: Olivia Leong

 

: Melissa M. Horowitz, Nidhy S. Paulose, Dana M. Weinkranz

Valley Stream: Thomas S. Marino

 

: Dina B. Bronstein

 

:

 

: Rebecca A. Grant, Jennifer M. Graziosa, Jean-Paul N. Jones, Eric Houle, Kwong Man Lee, Michelle A. Leimsider, Tina B. Lewis, Ewa Maryniak, Andrea A. Miller, Ariadne Papagapitos, Marisa S. Schneer, Sloane E. Schuster

 

:

 

: Patrick J. Fortin

Camden: Zea M. Wright

 

: Jennifer A. Palladino

New Hartford: Steven F. Baumgartner, Nishant Bhatt, Jeffrey M. Hoerle, Kathleen E. Virkler

 

: Mathew P. Barry, Rachel Getty, Jennifer L. Mungari

 

Mara V. Ladd, Shaun P. Montana, Kristen E. Nobles, Colleen A. Quigley

 

: Brett E. Farrow

 

:

 

: Nancy A. Landsberg

 

: James E. DeWan

 

: Matthew E. Bazydlo, Mary F. Bronchetti, Alison Xuan Ha

 

:

 

: Robert J. Senska

 

: Jason R. Allen, James E. Tyner

 

: William R. Johnson

 

: Nora W. Perkins

 

:

 

: Jason A. Matousek, Christopher J. Serotta

 

: Jamie C. Greenwald

 

: Stephanie D. Wilson

 

: Henry J. Michtalik

 

: Jennifer E. Chick

 

: Mary D. Furey, Marisa P. Marks

 

:

 

: Kerry A. Barrett

 

: Adam C. Cappel, Emily A. DeSantis

 

:

 

: Jason L. Bowers, S. Jennifer Setlur, Kaelyn E. South

 

: Anastasios P. Karabinis

Richfield Springs: Lacie L. Quintin

 

: Austin P. Wingate

 

:

 

: Jaison James

 

: Erin M. Rosenberg

 

: Elina Tabenshlak

 

: Ioana Calin, Corlie McCormick, Cequyna J. Moore, Joanna C. Tai

 

: Michelle S. Torres

 

: Richard A. Paulis

 

:

 

: Dena L. Whitesell

 

: Kasey E. Keenan

Mechanicville: Aaren Hatalsky, Nicholas R. Meyer, Tara K. Morcone, Kirsten M. Owad, Denise J. VanKempen

 

: Christopher B. Harrington

 

: Jeff A. Hoffman

Sand Lake: Shane P. Cahill

 

: Jessica A. Brearton, Angela M. Farina, Heath A. Heilpern

Wynantskill: Erin L. Aloan

 

: Matthew J. Modderno, Amy A. Pandya

 

:

 

: Dana L. Maselli, Michelle P. Tham

 

: Jessica L. Henry

West Nyack: Joanna L. Cohan, Victoria V. Hargreaves, Michael R. Iger

 

:

Canton: Jodi B. Mace, Aaron M. Noble

 

: Ian R. White

 

: Stephanie A. Sienkiewicz

 

: Philip M. Haynes, Kelly D. Marx, Jessica A. Paige

 

: Mark R. Kostuk, Kimberly R. Springer, Rachel L. Strader

Clifton Park: Brandy B. Bryden, Lee E. Kaufman, Michael F. Panayotou, Jeremy P. Spiegel

 

: Bryan E. Roy

 

: Jennifer A. Jakubowski

 

: Janelle E. Harnick

Greenfield Center: Darcy A. Tuczynski

 

: Karen L. DeVito

S. Glens Falls: Melissa A. Johnson

Saratoga Springs: Stephanie E. Davis, Courtney A. Hayden, Colleen E. Kyler

Stillwater: Tina M. Canary

 

Ellen M. O'Clair

 

:

 

: Heather M. Leet

 

: Anne E. Blankman, Thomas P. DePasquale, Christopher S. Hallenbeck, Amy C. Kilmer, Emily B. Morse, Nathaniel N. Strosberg

Rotterdam Junction: Frank C. DeLorenz

 

: Faried M. Anwari, Julia M. Chan, Sonia P. Coppola, Ryan A. Crowley, Spass S. Dimitrov, Robert P. Fontaine, Umber M. Gold, Timothy J. Hulihan, Jihyun LaRose, Jonathan D. Nieman, Michael G. Parisi, John G. Piccirillo, Hemwatie Ramasami, Christian Roessler, Vikramjit S. Sangha, Preeti Upadhya, Edward L. Valachovic, Orlando J. Zuluaga

 

: Neil E. Buhrmaster, John M. Cahill, Tanya R. Leet, Ryan H. Mackey, Jason M. Slater, Caroline S. Welch, Peter J. Zannitto

 

:

 

: Seth C. Madison

 

Heather M. Germann

 

: Michael R. Mosall

 

:

 

: John P. Houghton

 

:

 

: Quinlan D. Murphy

 

:

 

: Alyssa A. Forslund

East Setauket: Maura C. O'Keefe, Randi N. Scherz

Huntington: Jessica L. Moss

Islip Terrace: Lisa M. Stanek

North Babylon: Jennifer E. Miller

Northport: Lindsay D. Schwartz

 

: Jessica-Wind P. Abolafia

 

: Daniel J. Kelmanovich

 

: Elizabeth E. Schmitt

West Babylon: Matthew A. Raso

 

: John P. Betjemann

 

:

Bloomington: Rachel R. Lutke

Ellenville: Kathleen G. Healy

Gardiner: Melynda E. Ihrig

Highland: Barry M. Baker

 

: Phoebe Burr

 

: Kristopher J. Lovelett

 

: David F. Ott

 

:

 

: Jennifer L. Huntington

Glens Falls: Peter M. Casola

 

: Kimberly L. Bolster, Robert J. Moser, Eric M. Wisotzky

 

:

 

: Christopher T. Ellis

Greenwich: Robert J. Fruchter

 

:

Ardsley: Neeti B. Parikh

Armonk: Emily G. Simon, Michael J. Winn

Dobbs Ferry: Lesli S. Heffler

Goldens Bridge: Paul A. Stewart-Stand

Katonah: Sloan E. Miller

 

: Jonathan A. Gasthalter, David P. Polizzi

Peekskill: Loralynne Krobetzky

Pound Ridge: Catherine J. Janiga

 

: Lindsay H. Deak, Jeremy D. Sack, Alissa L. Schaps

 

: Stefan Bagnato, Michele Mosa

White Plains: Jay B. Comerford

 

:

Bliss: Elizabeth L. Perry

 

:

 

: Alison E. Prestia:

 

Ohio:

Franklin County

 

: Dana M. Masser:

Oklahoma:

Muskogee County

Muskogee: Susan S. Yoo:

 

Oregon:

Washington County

 

: Marie Maurer

 

: Lagen A. Biles:

 

Pennsylvania:

Adams County

 

: Miranda F. Feldmann

 

:

 

: Michelle A. McKinlay

 

:

 

: Hugh A. Meyer, Simon P. Storm

 

:

West Wyoming: Michelle M. Nerozzi

 

:

Abington: Emily E. Wood

Collegeville: Michael G. Jessup

 

: Mary E. Garofolo

 

:

 

: Ariel R. Torsone

 

:

Delmont: Jeffrey T. Ferraro:

 

Rhode Island:

Bristol County

 

: Ross G. Guida, William T. Humphreys, Amanda Jackson, Sarah A. Rankowitz

 

:

East Greenwich: Lisa E. Carbone, Derek B. McCowan

 

:

Portsmouth: Jessica B. Zuehlke

 

:

 

: Matthew M. Gendron, Lori J. Greene, Jessica B. Miller

Providence: Loranah S. Dimant

 

: Margit S. Conopask

Saunderstown: Lara E. Parish:

 

Texas:

Harris County

 

: Courtney L. Feeley, Daniel M. Pesikoff:

 

Virginia:

Fairfax County

 

: Olabosipo O. Sawyerr:

 

Vermont:

Addison County

Middlebury: Erin Q. Wittes

 

: Veronica L. Sack

 

:

 

: Devon L. Gershaneck

Dorset: Christy L. O'Leary

 

:

 

: Rebecca C. Butterfield, Jennifer P. Tobin

 

:

 

: Leah J. Nero, Kate M. Nero

 

:

 

: William R. Desrochers

 

: Ben M. Gauthier

 

: David C. Bernat::

 

Washington

King County

 

: Sara M. Hasson: Shayna C. Roberts: Ishita Islam, Shaker Choudhury

 

Other Countries:

Bahamas:

Nassau, Bahamas

 

Bangladesh:

Dhaka

Canada:

 

: Craig S. Gilmore

 

: Frederic Cyr

Willowdale, Ont.: Mark R. Will: Alvertos Diamantopoulos: Chloe M. Roumain: Nikhil Sudan

 

Greece:

Athens

 

Haiti:

Petion Ville

 

India:

Mumbai

 

: Naemmah S. Tan: Satyajit Bhardwaj

 

Malaysia

Kuala Lumpur

 

: Kah Mun Low: Dipankar Basnet: Saima Husain: Lesley R. Ritter

 

Nepal

 

Pakistan:

Karachi Cantt

 

Switzerland:

Colombier

Penang

Ampang

Quebec

Montreal, Quebec

Bellevue

Norwich

Ludlow

Chester

Windsor County

Guilford

Windham County

Rutland

Rutland County

Bennington

Bennington County

Salisbury

Reston

Houston

Washington County:

Hope Valley

Cranston

Providence County

Newport County

Kent County

Barrington

Westmoreland County

Milford

Pike County

Narberth

Montgomery County

Luzerne County

Bryn Mawr

Delaware County

Berwyn: Abby A. Jeffords

Phoenixville

Chester County

Gettysburg

Sherwood

Beaverton

Bexley

Rushville

Yates County

Wyoming County

Tarrytown

Scarsdale

Larchmont

Westchester County

Granville

Washington County

Queensbury

Brant Lake

Warren County

New Paltz

Mount Tremper

Kingston

Ulster County

Westhampton

Smithtown

Selden

Port Jefferson

Belleterre

Suffolk County

Wayland

Steuben County

Waterloo

Seneca County

Schoharie

Howes Cave:

Cobleskill

Schoharie County

Scotia

Schenectady

Niskayuna

Glenville

Schenectady County

Waterford:

Malta

Greenfield Center

Gansevoort

Galway

Ballston Spa

Saratoga County:

Ballston Lake

Massena

Hammond

Saint Lawrence County

Nyack

New City

Rockland County

Richmond County:

Staten Island

Troy

Petersburg

Nassau

East Greenbush

Averill Park

Rensselaer County

Woodside

Whitestone

Jamaica

Forest Hills

Flushing

Floral Park

Queens County

Roseboom

Otego

Oneonta

Otsego County

Oswego

Fulton

Oswego County

Newburgh

New Windsor

Middletown

Maybrook

Goshen

Chester

Orange County

Gorham

Geneva

Clifton Springs

Canandaigua

Ontario County

Syracuse

Manlius

Fayetteville

Onondaga County

Westmoreland

Utica:

Rome

Clinton

Boonville

Oneida County

New York City

New York County

Woodmere

Syosset

Sea Cliff

Roslyn

Plainview

Muttontown

Merrick

Great Neck

Franklin Square

Baldwin

Nassau County

Fultonville

Fort Johnson

Amsterdam

Montgomery County

Rochester

Pittsford

Fairport

Monroe County

North Brookfield

Madison County:

Cazenovia

Brooklyn

Kings County

Newport

Little Falls

Herkimer County:

Frankfort

Greene County:

Freehold

Pavilion

Genesee County

Gloversville

Fulton County:

Dolgeville

Franklin County:

Saranac Lake

Essex County:

Essex

Colden

Clarence

Erie County:

Buffalo

Rhinebeck

Poughkeepsie

Dutchess County:

Hyde Park

Cortland County:

Cortland

Kinderhook

Germantown

Columbia County:

Austerlitz

Clinton County:

Lyon Mountain

Chenango County:

Sherburne

Horseheads

Chemung County:

Elmira

Broome County:

Binghamton

Bronx County:

Bronx

Watervliet

Slingerlands

Latham

Guilderland:

Feura Bush

Delmar

Cohoes

Phillipsburg

Warren County

Kenilworth

Union County

Randolph

Pine Brook

Parsippany

Morris County

Holmdel

Englishtown

Monmouth County

Middlesex County

Princeton Junction

Hightstown

Mercer County

Hunterdon County

Short Hills

Essex County:

Glen Ridge

Camden County

Burlington County

Tenafly

Teaneck

Rutherford

River Edge

Ridgewood

Leonia

Englewood

Hopkinton

Merrimack County:

Canterbury

Nashua

Hillsborough County:

Manchester

Cheshire County:

Keene

Gilford

Scott County:

Shakopee

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