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The British invasion: York exchange covers new territory

Posted on Sep 18, 2008

Brett Arnall, left, alumni and fundraising officer at York St. John University; and Kate Hutchings, advancement services officer at YSJ; during a campus visit on Sept. 17, 2008.

Visitors from York (England) St. John University are nothing new on campus. The College has had an exchange program with the public university two hours north of London since 1981.

This week, though, the visitors were university officials looking to learn about our College Relations program.

Brett Arnall, alumni and fundraising officer, and Kate Hutchings, advancement services officer, met with staffers to discuss Union’s fundraising, alumni relations and communications operations.

Advancement is a nascent field at many institutions in the U.K., where higher education historically has been subsidized by the government. “At YSJ, we are five years into our development effort, much of which is ‘friend-raising,’” said Arnall. “With what we’ve learned at Union, we hope to transition to a higher level of fundraising.”

Each year, YSJ sends between three and five students to study at Union, said William Thomas, director of International Programs, who has overseen the exchange with YSJ since it began in 1981. About 20 Union students and a faculty member go to York each fall.

In 2003, Thomas was named an honorary fellow of YSJ in recognition of his services to education and international understanding.

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In Memoriam

Posted on Sep 18, 2008

Editor's note: Below is a 2,000-word biography of Dr. Theodore W. Fox ’37 written by son Henry Fox. This piece was distributed in written form at Fox’s funeral last May and is reprinted here with minor changes. Dr. Theodore W. Fox ’37 was father to Bill Fox ’72 and grandfather to Derek Fox ’05 .

The Ted Few People Knew

By Henry Fox

Ted was the most humble of souls, and only a very good listener could know much about him. But there was much about him to make his family proud.

Theodore W. Fox was born Dec. 7, 1916 in Hartford, Conn. His parents were recent immigrants from villages in the dismal morass of Eastern Europe, where most Jews lived in the 19th century. They probably would have called it Poland; it is now in Ukraine. His father, Asher (later William), was a promising student in his small town cheder (Hebrew school) before joining a brother and brother-in-law in Hartford, where he worked as a bricklayer. Perhaps William would have prospered in the boom years of the Roaring Twenties, had his life not been cut very short by tuberculosis.

From left, the late Dr. Theodore W. Fox ’37, his son Bill Fox ’72
and his grandson Derek Fox ’05 in 2001.

Soon after Ted’s birth, William was sent to cure in the Catskills and then the Rockies, his life ending in April 1923 at the National Jewish Hospital in Denver. [Son Henry located the grave 55 years later in the Golden Hill Cemetery of the Yiddish-speaking Workman’s Circle and, at last, Ted arranged for a headstone.] Eventually Ted took William as a middle name, then shortened it to “W.”, so his son Bill could have the whole name.

By all accounts, Ted was an energetic and inquisitive little boy. (His granddaughters particularly love the story of the time he threw a cat off a tenement roof to see whether cats really always land on their feet.) But Ted’s mother, Bessie, had no good way to support a child on her own. Briefly, he was in an orphanage and then foster care.

Out of economic necessity, Bessie acceded to an arranged marriage to a tailor in Albany who had older children, two daughters and probably a son. Like Cinderella, Ted had evil stepsisters. They resented having two more mouths for their father to feed and showed no trace of sisterly love. Ted never mentioned them by name, so let’s call them Drizella and Anastasia. In 1929 came the Stock Market crash, a harbinger of harder times to come, and, a few weeks later, the luckless Ted’s bar mitvah. (The synagogue was Ohav Shalom, where grandsons Jared and Derek became bar mitzvah many years later. The parashah was Mikketz—same as Henry’s; the haftorah was First Chanukah—same as Henry’s and Zoe’s.)

Life went from bad to worse with the Great Depression, and the family lost their home. Ted learned to appreciate the resources that a state capital offered to a child with no money, including good libraries and—difficult though it is for us to believe—an armory where he learned to fire a rifle.

Ted dedicated himself to his studies, no doubt believing that academic accomplishment would lead to a more comfortable life. He excelled in all subjects except English—perhaps befitting a man of few words—and graduated at the top of the Class of 1933 at Albany High School. He later called it luck and pointed out that a better student moved away in the nick of time.

Historians would say that 1933 was one of the two worst years of the Depression. There was no money to send Ted away to college, so he chose nearby Union College, where he could do pre-med. He chose Union over RPI at a time when a Jewish engineer was an unemployed engineer.

Commuting an hour each way probably cost him the social experience that most of us associate with college, but it did not slow down his academic accomplishments. In 1937 (the other nadir year of the Great Depression) he graduated from Union summa cum laude in chemistry with the highest grades in his college class. That was the year that Union decided that the valedictory address should be given by the gentile with the highest grades, so that honor went to somebody else.

He was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and his organic chemistry professor recommended him for Sigma Xi, the national science and engineering research society, but the request was vetoed by an anti-Semitic department chair. More importantly, he could not squeeze through the Jewish quota at Albany Medical College, notwithstanding their affiliation with Union College. There can be little doubt that Ted never forgot these indignities. Eventually he made amends with both institutions and became a loyal alumnus.

Jobs were scarce in 1937, so Ted went on to graduate school in chemistry and physics at the recently opened Duke University. He had probably never been south of Brooklyn, so one can only imagine the culture shock. His luck improved when his mother needed surgery back in Albany and the surgeon—some sort of Marcus Welby precursor—showed so much concern for his patient that he made sure that Albany Medical College accepted Ted in 1938.

Ted returned to Albany, where a friend’s brother, doubtlessly an angel in disguise, knocked on his door and told him that the National Council of Jewish Women was offering student loans to medical students. So his medical education was secure. His mother was taking in boarders—mostly state employees from New York City in search of a kosher home. (One of them surprised us all 45 years later by calling up and asking for Theodore Shaiman—he mistakenly used the surname of Ted’s stepfather. In their retirement years they became friends.)

On Ted’s 25th birthday, the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, shaping the life of his entire generation. He finished his internship at Good Samaritan Hospital in Troy, N.Y., and could have stayed on. But he wanted to fight the Nazis so he joined the service. Cautious even in his patriotism, he thought a tour in the U.S. Navy would be safer than trench warfare. But the Navy rejected him for flat feet (inadequate for marching around those ships, it seemed) so the U.S. Army got him. They shipped him west, his troop train passing through Denver, where his father had died, and on to California. Ted thought he was on his way to the Philippines, to battle tropical disease and help Gen. MacArthur return. But the Army Way was to turn him around, to Boston and then over to France, three months after D-Day.

Fortunately, the war was winding down, and his biggest enemy was boredom. He got as far as Germany and waited a year to be shipped back. Meanwhile, his stepfather had died, so his mother moved back to Hartford, where her first husband’s relatives still lived.

Millions of ex-G.I.’s were looking for civilian jobs, doctors included. He took a desk job with the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs in Hartford. There were residency openings in the new specialty of anesthesiology. (What a perfect job for the world’s most careful person.) Ted’s background in chemistry and physics, along with his diligence and attentiveness, served him well, and his retiring personality was no barrier to attending unconscious patients. He interviewed at the pre-eminent Bellevue Hospital, and might have been hired, had he said yes when asked whether he aspired to become a professor of anesthesiology. But his humility and honesty produced a negative response, and they suggested he would do well at the Bronx Veterans Affairs Hospital.

He did that Bronx residency and took the specialty qualification examinations in anesthesiology. Bellevue shouldn’t have worried. His written exam score was the highest in the Bronx, the highest in New York, and the highest in the United States. Not too surprisingly, his oral exam result was less outstanding.

While in the Bronx, he still returned to Hartford for his dental care. His hygienist had a friend in need of a date taller than herself, and thus he met his future wife, Sara. He thought her outgoing personality would make for a balanced ticket, and having studied 1930s psychology in college, he thought that her Ritvo genes would assure him intelligent children. Sara recognized his kindness, as well as his height, and things seemed to work out.

They married Sept. 19, 1948. They lived from 1949 to 1951 in Baltimore, where Bill was born, but Sara was appalled by the Civil War re-enactments, and they wanted to be closer to family.

In 1951 Ted became the first anesthesiologist at Peekskill (N.Y.) Hospital and went on to practice solo for years, a Herculean task. Days or nights off were few. Eventually, the eminent Paul Wood moved to Peekskill to help him out.

While in Peekskill, he became a leader of the First Hebrew Congregation, where his stamina during Yom Kippur Services did not escape notice. (His humble response was “there’s nothing else you’re supposed to do that day.”) Not wanting the relive the Depression, he didn’t buy a house until he could do it without a mortgage.

In 1959 there was a job opening in Hartford, and the whole family moved back, even after Henry told the realtor that he wanted to convey with the house. But the job in Hartford proved something of a mirage, and it was time to move again.

The surgeons in Peekskill begged Ted to come back, but he thought it would be awkward, and he also wanted to avoid the declining economy of the Hudson Valley. So, in 1961 he took a job at Monmouth Medical Center in Long Branch, NJ, where he practiced until he retired in 1989. Not wanting to repeat the Hartford experience, the family stayed behind for a whole year, until the practice had been vetted, before moving to New Jersey. Ted had already bought a house in Fair Haven, as a temporary measure. But he lived there just over half his life, and he died in that house on April 21, 2008.

Even the house says a lot about Ted. It was the closest house to his hospital that was both affordable and in the preferred public school district. He expected Bill and Henry to take their studies seriously, to speak English properly, to observe the Jewish holidays, not to waste money or property, and to avoid germs. He lived that way himself.

For a professional who eventually achieved affluence, he desired remarkably little for himself. He did not care for expensive vacations, fancy restaurants or luxury cars. In his later years, he rarely went to a movie, for fear that he wouldn’t like it and his money would go to waste. Ever the child of the Depression, he was saving for a rainy day. And he just didn’t think he was entitled to much. In his retirement, he was content to read a book from the public library, or audit a course at Brookdale Community College. A one-bedroom condo in West Palm Beach, Fla. was his biggest indulgence.

Unfortunately, his later years were marked by painful health problems. A hip fracture reduced his last six years of work to part-time practice. In all, he had three hip operations.

At the age of 81 he was hit by a car. He was hospitalized for two months and required numerous surgical procedures. He recovered, but had difficulty walking for the rest of his life. He had more falls and more fractures, always working hard to recover, always energetically supported by Sara.

Ted was generous and devoted to relatives. He managed to stay in touch with cousins who grew up in Europe and in Cuba. He always had unlimited time to listen to his children or grandchildren. And he never forgot a friend. After he died, his family found an address book that he had maintained since the 1940s.

He wanted as little attention as possible. When he turned 90, he would not accept an aliyah at his synagogue. When he became seriously ill, he would not even tell his son, a doctor, until an emergency-room visit made it unavoidable. He asked that his grandchildren not be told of his illness and, on his deathbed, said he didn’t want to take up too much of his children’s time on the phone. When he decided he was too old for aggressive cancer treatment, he apologized to any family members who might feel deserted. He wouldn’t even have wanted to be the center of attention at his own funeral.

As his daughter-in-law Sarah said many times about Ted, “you couldn’t make him up.” But God did. And we feel blessed to have had him.

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EVENTS

Posted on Sep 18, 2008

Friday, Sept. 19, 12:30-2 p.m. /Strauss Unity Center, third floor lounge, Reamer Campus Center / Office of Multicultural Affairs Open House

Friday, Sept. 19, 5-7 p.m. / Breazzano House / Annual Multicultural BBQ

Friday, Sept. 19, 4 p.m. / Humanities Lounge, 2nd floor / Ethics Bowl Team organizational meeting for the Union College Ethics Bowl Team. For more information, contact Professor Mark Wunderlich, Philosophy (wunderlm@union.edu)

Friday, Sept. 19 – Monday, Sept. 22, 8 and 10 p.m. / Reamer Campus Center Auditorium / Film: “Incredible Hulk”

Friday, Sept. 19, 12:30-2 p.m. / Strauss Unity Center, Reamer Campus Center Room 304/ Office of Multicultural Affairs Open House, “Celebrating Diversity@U”

Friday, Sept. 19, 5–9 p.m. / Mandeville Gallery and various downtown sites / Art Night Schenectady

Saturday, Sept. 20, 1 p.m. / Frank Bailey Field / Football vs. Muhlenberg

Saturday, Sept. 20, 1 p.m. / College Park / Field hockey vs. Wheaton

Saturday, Sept. 20, 3 p.m. / Reamer Campus Center Auditorium / Classic film: “North By Northwest”

Monday, Sept. 22, 7:30 p.m. / Visual Arts Building Room 215 / Poetry reading by Ed Pavlic, former professor of English at Union, featuring his new collection of poems, “Winners Have Yet To Be Announced: A Song for Donny Hathaway” (University of Georgia Press) 

Wednesday, Sept. 24, 6:30 p.m. / Reamer Campus Center Auditorium / David Muller of Mount Sinai Medical Center will address “Caregivers and Care Providers Coping with Death”; co-sponsored with the Community Hospice of Schenectady

Thursday, Sept. 25, 10 a.m.-1:30 p.m. / Lawn between Nott Memorial and Reamer Campus Center / National College Fire Safety Month activities, sponsored by the Union Office of Environmental Health & Safety, New York State Office of Fire Prevention and Control, and Schenectady Fire Department. Events include live mock dorm room burn, fire extinguisher use training, firefighter challenge/dummy drag and more

Stephen Alford

Thursday, Sept. 25, 6 p.m. / Nott Memorial / "For God and the Queen: Torture, Religion and National Security in Elizabethan England," public talk by Stephen Alford of Cambridge University; sponsored by the departments of History, English, Political Science and Religious Studies

Friday, Sept. 26 – Monday, Sept. 29, 8 and 10 p.m. / Reamer Campus Center Auditorium / Film: “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of Crystal Skull”

Friday, Sept. 26, 1 p.m. / Frank Bailey Field / Field hockey vs. St. Lawrence

Friday, Sept. 26, 4 p.m. / College Park / Men’s soccer vs. Vassar (Liberty League contest) 

Saturday, Sept. 27, 1-6 p.m. / Downtown Schenectady / Welcome Back Students Day, featuring Union College and Schenectady County Community College student activities, specials and promotions

Saturday, Sept. 27, noon / Messa Rink / Women’s ice hockey vs. Toronto Junior Aeros

Saturday, Sept. 27, 1 p.m. / Frank Bailey Field / Football vs. Rochester

Saturday, Sept. 27, 2 p.m. / College Park / Men’s soccer vs. RPI (Liberty League contest) 

Saturday, Sept. 27, 2 p.m. / Tennis courts / Women’s tennis vs. SUNY Plattsburgh

Saturday, Sept. 27, 10 p.m. / Old Chapel / UProgram presents Psychic Madman Jim Karol 

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EXHIBITS

Posted on Sep 18, 2008

 

Through Sept. 19

Mandeville Gallery

Nott Memorial

Outside Information: A Site-Specific Sound Installation by Stephan Moore

Moore, a composer, audio artist and sound designer in New York City, uses the complex acoustics inside the Nott Memorial to transform the building’s interior into a dense wilderness of small, shifting sounds.  

 

“Contemplating Peace: Corpse Pose,” 2008, digital construction from pinhole paper negatives, 22” x 7” by artist Katharine Kreisher, on display at the Mandeville Gallery July 10 through Sept. 28, 2008 as part of SNAP!, a group exhibition of five contempo

Through Sept. 28

Mandeville Gallery

Nott Memorial

“SNAP! Contemporary Photography”

Features the unconventional photographic treatments and approaches of five contemporary female photographers: Sally Apfelbaum, Nora Herting, Katharine Kreisher, Melinda McDaniel and Lynn Saville.  

 

Through Oct. 21

Wikoff Student Gallery

Nott Memorial

Optical Union

Photographs by Meghan Haley-Quigley ’08, Rui Fen Huang ’08, Tobias Leeger ’09, Steven Leung’08, Lauren Muske ’07, Jonathan Scheff ’11 and Juneui Soh ’08, taken from final portfolios from spring 2008’s Photography 3 class taught by Professor Martin Benjamin. The focus of each student’s portfolio ranges in subject and style, from documentary images to portraits to abstractions.

 

 

 

Knackers Yard, installation by Prof. Anthony Cafritz

Through Dec. 1

Visual Arts Building

Burns Atrium Art Gallery

Knackers Yard

Visiting Assistant Professor of Visual Arts Anthony Cafritz’s recent installation of seemingly disparate materials that “attempts to describe the current state of things.”

 

 

 

 

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Union is new affiliate in NASA NY Space Grant Program

Posted on Sep 18, 2008

Union NASA NY Space Grant Summer 2008 stipend recipients are, from left, John Robens ’09, David Barker ’09 and Daniel Barringer ’11.

Three Union students in the Department of Physics and Astronomy were engaged in advanced, hands-on research recently as part of Union’s new membership in the NASA NY Space Grant Program.

“The program gives our students opportunities to participate in research in space-related fields at Union and affiliate institutions and to apply for national Space Grant Consortium internships at NASA centers,” said Rebecca Koopmann, associate professor of physics and astronomy, who is administering grant activities at the College.

NASA NY Space Grant is headquartered at Cornell University under the direction of Yervant Terzian and has 20 affiliate members across New York state.

This summer, John Robens ’09 worked with Koopmann on a project titled “Searching for Optical Counterparts of Galaxies and Tidal Streams Detected by the ALFALFA Survey.”

He analyzed images obtained at Cerro Tololo Observatory in Chile, via the Small and Moderate Aperture Research Telescope System, to search for possible optical matches of galaxies detected at radio wavelengths at the Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico.

“The research I did furthered my understanding in physics and astronomy by leaps and bounds. I came in with some very basic knowledge, and I left with moderate and even some advanced knowledge in the field,” said Robens.

John Robens ’09 presents the results of his research at the Union College Summer Seminar Series.

“I learned more than I could have hoped for this summer, not only about physics and astronomy, but also about research in general,” he added. “My work helped to further the overall research goal, and my results were helpful in limiting the brightness of possible optical matches.”

David Barker ’09 and Daniel Barringer ’11 used the Union College Observatory 20-inch telescope in their research with Professor and Observatory Manager Francis Wilkin. 

Barringer’s project, “Searching for Eclipses of Extrasolar Planets,” targets stars known to have planets to search for slight dimming when a planet passes between Earth and the star.

Barker’s project, “CCD Photometry of Variable Stars and Transiting Planets,” is aimed at tracking how the light output of variable sources changes in time. Barker is continuing the search for extrasolar transiting planets as his senior thesis for his major in physics and astronomy.

NASA initiated the National Space Grant College and Fellowship Program, known as Space Grant, in 1989 to expand opportunities for Americans to understand and participate in its aeronautics and space projects by supporting and enhancing science and engineering education, research and public outreach.

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Old Union

Posted on Sep 17, 2008

A WWII remnant found recalls one Union story

A war memorabilia collector in Paris recently sent a letter to Union College asking about Dr. Joseph C. Driscoll ’32, a U.S. Army doctor who earned a Bronze Star in World War II for heroism during a 1944 battle in Belgium.

“I have in my collection two World War II identity cards that once belonged to Capt. Joseph Driscoll,” collector Nicolas Charpentier wrote. “Could you please let me know what you know about him and the units he was a part of during the war?”

The U.S. War Department identification card for Joseph C. Driscoll ’32, a U.S.
Army Medical Corps captain who served in World War II from 1942 to 1945 and received a Bronze Star for heroism during the Battle
of the Bulge. Summer 2008, Union College maga

Union College magazine corresponded with Charpentier, uncovered details of Driscoll’s war service and obtained images of his U.S. War Department identification card. The ID card is a symbolic remnant of one Union story among many from World War II, which saw a bit more than 3,000 Union graduates serve and 76 die in military action, according to the Encyclopedia of Union College History. About 1,200 of the alumni who served World War II were part of the U.S. Navy’s V-12 officer training program, though Driscoll, who joined the U.S. Army in 1942 at age 32—nine years after his Union graduation— was not in that program.

After graduating from Union, Driscoll earned a degree from Albany Medical College. In 1938, after a residency at Greenwich (Conn.) Hospital and another surgical residency at Bellevue Hospital in New York City, he returned to private practice in Schenectady. In December 1942, Driscoll became one of the first physicians in the city to join the war effort after voluntarily enlisting.

After completing a training course in chemical warfare and working as an instructor at Camp McCain in Mississippi, he was drafted to lead a medical corps unit which later saw action during the Battle of the Bulge, according to Schenectady-area newspaper accounts from the mid-1940s.

In mid-December 1944 the German army sent about 200,000 troops into a swath of the Ardennes Forest covering parts of Belgium, Luxembourg and France in a last-ditch attempt to regain control of the war, which had slipped away in the months following the D-Day invasion. The counteroffensive led by U.S. Army Lt. Gen. George S. Patton, Jr. became known as the Battle of the Bulge. It lasted through mid-January 1945 and marked a costly but critical victory leading up the German surrender in May 1945, according to the U.S. Army Center of Military History.

The Bronze Star citation issued by the U.S. Army, reads in part: “Capt. Joseph C. Driscoll distinguished himself by meritorious achievement in … operations against the enemy on Dec. 29, 1944 in the area of La Roche, Belgium. During fierce battle action, Capt. Driscoll braved heavy enemy action to supervise the operations of his medical company. When overwhelming pressure on our defense made it necessary to withdraw, he led his men in the movement of 75 wounded to safety.”

The citation was issued by the 7th Armored Division but, while at Camp McCain, Driscoll was assigned to the 87th Infantry Division, 312th Medical Battalion.

Driscoll returned from the war in January 1946 and resumed his private medical practice in Schenectady. He ran that practice for 38 years from his home and office at 1109 Union St., about a half mile from campus. He remained in private practice until 1978, when he became an examining physician for the Workers Compensation Board in Albany.

A year prior to enlisting in the U.S. Army, Driscoll married Dr. Mary Blackmer, a graduate of Mt. Holyoke College and Albany Medical Center. In the early 1940s, Blackmer was psychiatrist at the Marshall Sanitarium in Troy, N.Y. and later worked at Albany Veterans Hospital. The couple had no children.

Blackmer died in August 2000 and Driscoll a few months later on Dec. 30, 2000. Driscoll left a $1.5 million bequest to the College. The bequest today funds the Joseph C. Driscoll Professor of Sociology and Marine Policy, now occupied by Ilene M. Kaplan, who is also the chair of College’s Sociology Department and a guest investigator at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Cape Cod.  

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