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Students fly high in aero design competition

Posted on Apr 21, 2009

Stephen Schneider '09 and Greg Fullenkamp '09 stand beside the plane they designed and built for the SAE Aero Design Competition. The contest was held in Georgia ealier this month.

When Stephen Schneider ’09 and Greg Fullenkamp ’09 arrived in Kennesaw, Ga. earlier this month, they’d never flown the airplane they were entering in the Society of Automotive Engineers Aero Design competition. They’d watched their 15-pound creation taxi along the Union track, but that was it.

Nevertheless, the mechanical engineering students, coached by Ashok Ramasubramanian, held their own in the three-day event, which drew contenders from schools in Canada, Poland, Mexico, Venezuela, Germany, Brazil and India.

“Not having tested the plane before, it was satisfying to see it take its first flight,” Fullenkamp said. “We didn’t win, but we were able to stand up to the competition – at least most of it.”

It’s been nearly a decade since Union last participated in the contest, according to Ramasubramanian, assistant professor of mechanical engineering. Unfortunately, the College’s radio-controlled plane didn’t get off the ground that year.

Schneider and Fullenkamp faced their own technical hurdle when their engine failed to start. With some diagnostic help from another team, the duo’s aircraft ultimately performed well in flight trials.

“We finished 21st out of 44 teams,” said Ramasubramanian. “If we were scored just on flight performance, we would have finished higher.”

The Union plane, which has a wing-span of about six feet, carried a payload of 13.2 pounds during flight trials. The overall winning team, from Brazil, carried 28 pounds and excelled in the competition’s second crucial challenge.

During the oral presentation portion, each team tried to convince a mock government customer to buy its plane.

“We made rookie mistakes that cost us points,”  Ramasubramanian said. “We’ll have to figure that presentation out.”

Despite these setbacks, Schneider, Fullenkamp and Ramasubramanian consider their performance a great success and a valuable learning experience.

“This was real-life, real-time engineering,” Ramasubramanian said. “Planes that landed usually sustained some damage, so the students would run off to the tent and furiously patch and glue to repair them.”

Schneider and Fullenkamp, who were also coached by Mechanical Engineering Associate Professor Frank Wicks, plan to give an advice-filled presentation to juniors interested in competing next year.

Their biggest recommendation?

“Start preparing way early,” Schneider said.

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Union among most referenced schools in global media

Posted on Apr 21, 2009

Spring on Campus

Union is among the top 10 of the most referenced liberal arts schools appearing in the global media, according to a Texas research company.

The Global Language Monitor ranked the schools on how often they appear in the global print and electronic media, on the Internet, blogosphere and social networking sites.

Harvard finished ahead of Columbia for the number one spot among U.S. universities. In the liberal arts category, Colorado College topped Williams. Union was ranked eighth, below Amherst, Wellesley, Oberlin, Middlebury and the University of Richmond, and ahead of Vassar and Bard colleges.

To read a story about the rankings by United Press International, click here.

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Holocaust lecturer: Stand against hate

Posted on Apr 21, 2009

Stephen Berk, the Henry and Sally Schaffer Professor of Holocaust and Jewish Studies, recently spoke at the Helen and Leon Sperling Holocaust Memorial Lecture in Utica.
 

To read a story about the talk in the Utica Observer-Dispatch, click here (registration may be required). 

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City, Union College unveil field of their dreams

Posted on Apr 21, 2009

The College officially dedicated its new baseball field in Schenectady’s Central Park Friday, April 10, 2009, during a ceremony between games of a doubleheader against Skidmore College.

In a partnership between the College and the city, Union donated $162,000 to renovate “Diamond C,” one of three baseball fields in Central Park. The upgrades include a new infield featuring Kentucky bluegrass sod, new bases and a sprinkler system. Improvements were also made to the dugouts, outfield, bullpen areas and the fencing surrounding the field.

The city’s youth leagues will be able to use the new field when the College season ends in early May.

Several media outlets covered the ceremony. To read the story in the Daily Gazette, click here (registration may be required).

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Union among most referenced schools in the global media

Posted on Apr 21, 2009

Union is among the top 10 of the most referenced liberal arts schools appearing in the global media, according to a Texas research company.

The Global Language Monitor ranked the schools on how often they appear in the global print and electronic media, on the Internet, blogosphere and social networking sites.

Harvard finished ahead of Columbia for the number one spot among U.S. universities. Colorado College in Colorado Springs topped Williams in the liberal arts category. Union was ranked eighth, below Amherst, Wellesley, Oberlin, Middlebury and the University of Richmond.

To read a story about the rankings by United Press International, click here.

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