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Charlotte Hawkins ’76 The family doctor is in

Posted on Mar 1, 1994

Charlotte Hawkins '76

As a family practitioner, Charlotte Hawkins '76 is one of the people who is often seen as the future of healthcare in America.

Hawkins not only knows a little about everything, but also a great deal about a few things, especially obstetrics. In fact, Hawkins's practice, which includes one other physician and one physician's assistant, delivers on average of about 200 babies each year.

Hawkins wanted to be a doctor ever since she was a little girl. “I spent the first several years of my life going in and out of hospitals with a urinary reflux,” she recalls. “Finally, when I was six, I had an operation that solved the problem. But ever since I was two and began to remember the treatments, I wanted to become a doctor.”

After attending Union because of its premedical program, Hawkins went on to the University of Rochester Medical School. She toyed with the idea of a concentrating in surgery, but decided to become a family practitioner since she had grown up in the small town of
Newport, N.Y., and had been exposed to family medicine for most of her childhood.

After ten years as a family practitioner, Hawkins has developed reasons beyond mere nostalgia for why she loves what she does. First and foremost, Hawkins enjoys becoming involved in both a person's and a family's life. Living in a small city like Cortland, N.Y., has given her the opportunity to work with grandparents and their children and their grandchildren.

And working with extended families gives Hawkins a benefit many specialists can never enjoy-a clinical, family medical history. “You can really gain a great insight into just what's going on medically throughout generations,”
she says.

Since thirty to forty percent of Hawkins's practice consists of obstetrics and gynecology, she has the pleasure of nursing a fetus through prenatal
care, performing the childbirth, and then continuing through the pediatric stage. “Thankfully I'm not old enough to say I've treated one of those babies with adult medicine, but I imagine one day I will be,” she says.

Hawkins landed in upstate New York through the National Health Service Corps. The corps had paid for Hawkins's medical education and she was obligated to practice first in a rural medical district. She spent three years commuting among three upstate clinics that were at least twenty miles from the nearest doctor or hospital. She was the only M.D. on the premises, so she was
responsible for the treatments administered by the assistants.

A family practice in the middle of the nineties has its struggles. Hawkins says that insurance companies and government regulations have become increasingly inappropriate. She cites the insurance company representative who calls just a few hours after she has checked a patient into a hospital.

“We'll still be trying to figure out just what's wrong and the insurance company will want an update on what treatments we're going to administer. It can be frustrating.”

Despite these difficulties and the increasing risk of malpractice suits, Hawkins treats anyone, regardless of his or her ability to pay. “I simply will not turn a patient away,” she states firmly.

“Family medicine is a growing field,” says Hawkins. “Families like to deal with one doctor and not a pediatrician, an adolescent physician, and a whole cast of adult medical specialists. With family practitioners, one family can see one doctor.”

And for many families in the small town of Cortland, Charlotte Hawkins is all they need.

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Union 200 The bicentennial Campaign

Posted on Mar 1, 1994

The Yulman Theater Takes Shape

The normally quiet northwest corner of the campus has been converted into a bustling “hard hat” zone, as the Morton and Helen Yulman Theater begins to take shape. The new facility is located on North Terrace Lane, just north of Bronner House (now part of North College). In addition to the theater and box office, the Yulman Theater building will contain an actors' studio and lab, offices for theater faculty and the Mountebanks, a scene shop, a design and drafting lab, a costume shop, and a “Green
Room.  “The College gratefully acknowledges those individuals and foundations whose generosity has made this Bicentennial project possible:

Donors to the Yulman Theater

Gift of $3,000,000
  • Morton H. '36 and Helen Yulman

Gifts of $250,000
  • Robert Cummings, Jr. '71 

  • The Fred L. Emerson Foundation 
  • The Estate of James M. Schmidt '17
Gifts of $100,000 to $249,999
  • The Estate of Margaret Lee Crofts

Gifts of $50,000 to $99,999
  • Herbert 0. '39 and Jean Fox 

  • The William & Mary Greve Foundation 
  • Barbara C. and Albert W. Lawrence 
  • J. Dawson Van Eps '28
Gifts of $25,000 to $49,999
  • Richard A. Ferguson '67 

  • Alan M. Gnessin '76 
  • James H. Maloy, Inc. 
  • Mr. & Mrs. Richard C. Tilghman, Jr. '69 
  • Gloria and Rhein Vogel, Jr. '53
Gifts of $10,000 to $24,999
  • David L. Henle '75 

  • Karen Singer Miller '79 
  • Anthony P. Tartaglia '54, M.D.
Gifts of $1,000 to $9,999
  • Vincent C. DeBaun '47 

  • Lewis Horwitz '33 
  • Donald G. Mackenzie '34
Gifts under $1,000
  • Anonymous 

  • Paul J. Adamo 
  • Harold Ashworth 
  • Kenneth Baer 
  • John J. Barrett 
  • Richard I. Barstow '29, M.D. 
  • Peter Bishko '63 
  • Lee Bloomrosen '76 
  • Barbara C. Burek '75 
  • Mary E. Cahill 
  • Robert J. Campbell '78, M.D. 
  • Philippe Y. Chang '90 
  • Robert C. Connell '42 
  • Francis P. Coward '42 
  • Peter T. Crames '79 
  • Burton B. Delack '36 
  • Ruth Anne Evans 
  • Janet R. Gray 
  • Karl S. Hartmann '90 
  • Robert H. Hess 
  • Richard G. Hoppenstedt '73 
  • Karen I. Huggins '77 
  • Stephen S. Israel '49 
  • William D. Katz '75 
  • J. Robert LaPann '44 
  • Adele Levine, in memory of Leonard J. Levine '42 
  • Kenneth J. Male '45 
  • Mary Kay and Lawrence J. Matteson '61 
  • Julie C. Medow '92 
  • Michelle Merer '91 
  • Joseph E. Milano '36 
  • Joseph A. Nalli '81 
  • F. John Neverman '47 
  • James B. Newton '71 
  • Orazio Ottaviano '47 
  • George R. Richards 
  • Donal M. Rickard '41 
  • John J. Roberts '40 
  • Richard E. Roberts '50 
  • Deborah Sabin 
  • Michael 0. Schulitz '90 
  • Patricia L. Seftel '80 
  • Kenneth S. Sheldon, Jr. '50 
  • Leroy Siegel '46 
  • J. Michael Smiles 
  • Peter K. Smith '70 
  • Gail Goodman Snitkoff '74 
  • Louis S. Snitkoff '73, M.D. 
  • Dorothy Golub Spira 
  • Professor Hilary Tann 
  • John Tesiero 
  • Professor Donald R. Thurston 
  • Harrison Todd 
  • Dean and Mrs. James E. Underwood 
  • Edward W. VanWoert '71 
  • Abbie S. Verner 
  • Sally Webster
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Keck Foundation supports chemistry

Posted on Mar 1, 1994

A $175,000 grant to the College from the W. M. Keck Foundation of Los Angeles will be used to improve and renovate two chemistry laboratories and equip them with some of the most advanced instrumentation available.

The grant will give Union students, including freshmen in introductory chemistry laboratories, access to some of the most sophisticated spectroscopic instrumentation, according to Leslie Hull, chairman of the Chemistry Department.

“It is highly unusual for undergraduates to have direct access to this type of equipment,” Hull says. “That our freshmen will use this instrumentation in
their labs, we think, will make chemistry at Union unique.”

Additional renovation will also take place in a senior laboratory in polymer chemistry. Added equipment for that lab was purchased with a 1989 grant from the National Science Foundation.

The renovation and new equipment are intended to raise the level of interest by students through discovery-oriented experiments and the hands-on use of computers and instruments, Hull says.

The renovation and instrumentation also will be used in the department's undergraduate research program. About fifteen students are involved in undergraduate research; most either publish their research results or present them at the annual National Conference on Undergraduate Research and at the College's Steinmetz Symposium, an exposition of undergraduate research.

The equipment includes two diode array UV/VIS spectrophotometers, two FT-IR spectrophotometers, and two capillary gas chromatographs with flame ionization detection. The instruments will be supplemented with additional equipment from the department that will include additional UV/VIS and FT-IR equipment, an atomic absorption spectrophotometer, and two scanning tunnelling microscopes.

Union has received a number of grants from the W. M. Keck Foundation, including $100,000 in 1984 for computer science equipment; $125,000
in 1986 for chemistry, geology, and mechanical engineering equipment; and $200,000 in 1988 for geology equipment.

An average of twelve chemistry majors graduate each year, two-thirds of whom go on to graduate or medical school. Union ranks fifth of 867 fouryear private colleges in the number of graduates who go on to attain Ph.D.s in chemistry.

The W. M. Keck Foundation, one of the nation's largest foundations in terms of annual grants, was established in 1954 by the late William M. Keck, founder of the Superior Oil Company, who also created in his will the W. M. Keck Trust for the benefit of the Foundation.

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Gifts, grants, and bequests

Posted on Mar 1, 1994

Recent gifts, grants, and bequests to the College include:

Nearly $2 million was received in distributions from estates and trusts. This includes:

  • $779,000 from the estate of Marshall W. Quandt '33, which will be used for scholarships; 
  • $750,000 from the estate of Neil B. Reynolds '24, which will support the renovation and expansion of Schaffer Library; 
  • $167,400 from the James B. Schmidt '17 Trust; 
  • $244,000 from the Helen M. Smith Trust; 
  • A total of $39,000 from the estates of Anthony B. Cieri '31, Ernest Ligon, James R Kelsey '22, and the Sanford P. Thompson '42 Trust. 
  • The College received $345,530 in gifts for life income arrangements. Edgar A. Sandman '40, Niel Pendleton '33, Jerry L. Thurston '61, Karen Singer Miller '79, George P. Haskell '37, Charles D. Lothridge '44, William C. Bachtel 70G, Kevin A. Kilbourne '79, and Christine 1. Reilly '75 made gifts in exchange for Charitable Gift Annuities. 
  • A two-year grant of $59,100 from the NYNEX Foundation to support the Computer-Assisted Bulletin Board System (CABBS), which serves secondary mathematics and science teachers in fourteen upstate New York counties. The grant will support workshops at the College to train teachers on how to use CABBS. The system, a network designed to enhance math and science teaching, is based on the College's mainframe computer. 
  • An unrestricted gift of $17,737 from the estate of Reginald L. Brooks '26. 
  • A gift of $10,695 toward the Pooled Life Income Fund from Codman Hislop '31, research professor emeritus of American civilization. 
  • Robert B. Lee '43, Robert E. Groundwater '42, Lee L. Davenport '37, D. Vincent Cerrito '32, and J. Dawson Van Eps '28 each made contributions to one of Union's Pooled Life Income Funds. 
  • An undeveloped lot in Williamsburg, Va., was donated to the College by Barbara Brugh, widow of William Gietz '49. When sold, the proceeds will be used to create a scholarship in Mr. Gietz's memory.
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May I have the next dance?

Posted on Mar 1, 1994

It may have been decades since Union students moved to dance steps with names like the Fox-trot or the Jitterbug.

But they're doing it again, courtesy of the Ballroom Dancing Club.

Dancers had eight lessons during the fall term with four informal Wednesday Relaxers” to practice their steps, according to Heather Reynolds '95, who organized the club with classmates Jennifer Huang and Pam Lin.

The core of the dancers, mostly women, signed up at an activity fair last fall. To remedy the gender imbalance, club members did some recruiting in men's residence halls. Now, the club is evenly split between women and men.

In the winter term, there were two classes – beginners on Mondays, intermediates on Thursdays. The teacher was from the local Arthur Murray Dance Studio.

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The Nott as you’ve never seen it

Posted on Mar 1, 1994

nott 1

One-hundred-eighty one years ago a dream assumed visible form
on Nistiquona Hill. The dreamers were Joseph Jacques Ramee, a French architect, and Eliphalet Nott, Union's president; the dream was a new home for the College. At the heart of the Ramee campus was a great domed cylinder-a Roman rotunda. Now, that centerpiece is being restored to the majesty of its youth. Here are a few photographs of a Nott Memorial many of us have never seen.

It was not contemplated in building the Alumni and Memorial Hall that it should be permanently used as a Library. For its intended uses viz. as
a place for holding great gatherings and receptions of the Alumni and others, it is admirably adapted.

William Appleton Potter, architect, 1881

nott 2

The building will be devoted to the uses of a Library and of an Art and Memorial Alumni Collection in one large room, with alcoves and galleries, open from floor to roof.

Eliphalet Nott Potter, President of the College, 1874

I have now the opinion that the best plan for a Graduate Hall will be to put up a central building of two stories making the one a chapel & the other the Grad. Hall. This would relieve the present Geol. Hall and give us room for some space for our library & museum. When however a library is needed we would erect a fireproof building on purpose for it-say in the space back of the Central Building.

Jonathan Pearson, treasurer of the College, 1856

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