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Cross-cultural collaboration: Students build a maison in Montreal

Posted on Apr 13, 2010

Habitat Montreal

Union’s newly established Habitat for Humanity chapter has already gone global.

Five Union students, working with Habitat for Humanity Montreal and Habitat members from McGill University, recently spent their spring break in the Quebec capital working on an apartment duplex for two families.

It was the first alternative spring break organized by Habitat for Humanity at Union, and “it was such an awesome success and incredible experience, it won’t be our last,” said Sarah Gagnon ’12.

“Amazing,” agreed Stefanie Charles ’12. “For most, it was our first time building a framework for doors and walls, but as the week progressed, we became more knowledgeable and worked on our own in groups.”

Gagnon, Charles and the other Union volunteers – Jim Walker ’10, Neeraj Mangla ’10 and Zoralys Molina ’13 – learned basic carpentry skills, including how to align a wall, set up scaffolding, saw wood, and frame doorways, walls and closets.  

College volunteers: McGill student Davina McLelland, left, and Union’s Sarah Gagnon during Montreal Habitat program, spring 2010

Working seven-hour days, the Union and McGill volunteers helped build a bathroom, laundry room and four closets on the duplex’s top floor.

"The staff on site helped us use the power tools but also taught us why certain things had to be done precisely, such as calculating the size of the wood pieces,” Charles noted. “It was a real accomplishment to see the room come to life as the frames were completed.”

Union Habitat Chapter President Cybil Tribie ’11 organized the trip. Working with former Kenney Community Center Program Specialist Santos Avila ’08, she did everything from write contracts and budget proposals to book the hostel where the group stayed. Avila accompanied the group and also pitched in on building projects.

 

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EVENTS

Posted on Apr 13, 2010

Thursday, April 15, 4:30 p.m. / Schaffer Library, Phi Beta Kappa Room / Philosophy Speaker Series presents: Michael Bishop of Florida State University on “The Nature of Well Being”

Friday, April 16 – Monday April 19, 8 and 10 p.m. / Reamer Campus Center Auditorium / Film: “Nine”

Saturday, April 17, 1 p.m. / Central Park / Baseball vs. RPI (DH)

Saturday, April 17, 5 p.m. / Memorial Chapel and Golub House / Union's chapter of FaceAIDS features inspirational speaker Gregg Cassin, a gay father living with the HIV virus, and his teenager daughter, Breauna. Reception at 7 p.m. at Golub

Saturday, April 17, 7 p.m. / Frank Bailey Field / Men’s lacrosse vs. Williams College

Sunday, April 18, noon / Alexander Field / Softball vs. University of Rochester (DH)

Monday, April 19 / All campus / Office of Admissions hosts Accepted Student Days

Monday, April 19, 12:50 p.m. / Humanities 115 / The Asian Studies Program presents Bennington College Professor Mansour Farhang on “The Sino-Iranian Relations”

Monday, April 19, 3:05-4:45 p.m. / Social Sciences Room 016 / Pizza & Politics presents "Local Newspapers in a Changing Media Environment," with Pulitzer Prize-winning editor Mark Mahoney, editorial page editor of The Post Star (Glens Falls, N.Y.) Given the special time for this event, snacks will be served instead of pizza.

Tuesday, April 20, 4 p.m. / Frank Bailey Field / Women’s lacrosse vs. SUNY Cortland

Tuesday, April 20, 4 p.m. / Central Park / Baseball vs. Williams College

Wednesday, April 21, 7:30 p.m. / Viniar Athletic Center / Hoops for Help to Chile and Haiti fundraiser; basketball game pitting students against staff; doors open at 7 p.m.. Tickets available at Reamer Campus Center next week or at the door.

Thursday, April 22, 3:30 p.m. / Alexander Field / Softball vs. SUNY New Paltz (DH)

Friday, April 23, 4 p.m. / Frank Bailey Field / Women’s lacrosse vs. Clarkson

Friday, April 23 – Monday April 26, 8 and 10 p.m. / Reamer Campus Center Auditorium / Film: “Lovely Bones”

Saturday, April 24, noon / Frank Bailey Field / Men’s Lacrosse vs. Clarkson

Saturday, April 24, 1 p.m. / Central Park / Baseball vs. Clarkson (DH)

Saturday, April 24, 3 p.m. / Frank Bailey Field / Women’s lacrosse vs. St. Lawrence

Saturday, April 24, 8 p.m. / Memorial Chapel / Chamber Concert Series presents American pianist Jeremy Denk

Sunday, April 25, noon / Central Park / Baseball vs. Williams College

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Holocaust survivor helps mark Yom HaShoah this evening

Posted on Apr 12, 2010

Holocaust survivor Herb Lewis, grandfather of Danielle Horowitz ’12, will speak at a Yom HaShoah service this evening at 6 p.m. in the Reamer Campus Center Auditorium.

Yom HaShoah, or Holocaust Remembrance Day, is a day of commemoration for the approximately six million Jews who died during World War II as a result of the actions carried out by Nazi Germany. It also honors Jewish resistance and heroism.

Lewis, born Chaim Lazerowitz in 1926 in Wodzislaw, Poland, was sent to a work camp, Skarzysko-Kamienna, at age 15. He never saw his parents or siblings again.

He was an inmate of Skarzysko-Kamienna and the Chenstochova slave labor camps from 1941 to 1945. He was sent to Buchenwald and Flossburg before liberation in April 1945.

After the war, Lewis worked in Germany with the U.S. Army before coming to America and officially enlisting. Later, he went to college, married and owned a bagel bakery in Brooklyn. Now retired, he lives in Cedarhurst, Long Island.

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RecycleMania ranks College’s recycling effort

Posted on Apr 9, 2010

Just when you thought there was nothing left to rank in higher ed, here comes RecycleMania, a benchmarking program that gives top marks to some of the College’s sustainability initiatives.

Through March 20, Union was ranked second in corrugated cardboard recycled per person with 20.82 pounds. Kalamazoo led the field with 22.65 pounds. Rounding out the top five, in order, were Franklin and Marshall College, Rutgers University and Wells College.

Union was ranked fifth in the “Per Capita Classic,” in which schools compete to see which can collect the largest amount of recyclables per person. Union had 43.6 pounds. The U.S. Coast Guard Academy led with 54.83 pounds.

RecycleMania is a friendly competition for college and university recycling programs to promote waste reduction activities. Results, updated weekly, are at: http://www.recyclemaniacs.org//Results.aspx

The recycling program is led by Terry Miltner, assistant manager of cleaning services, and U-Sustain’s Recycling Subcommitee. Miltner said that members decided this year to focus on corrugated cardboard. “This was the low-hanging fruit, something we could easily move,” he said.

Coach Paul Wehrum and the men’s lacrosse team led a successful cardboard drive last fall. On move-in weekend in September, the team collected 13.5 tons of cardboard, a 473 percent jump over the same weekend in 2008.

“It started there and it didn’t stop,” Miltner said. “This has been a real on-going group effort.”

Members of U-Sustain’s Recycling Subcommittee include Meghan Haley Quigley ’11, Erin Delman ’12, Prof. Jeff Corbin, Prof. Laura McManus, and Loren Rucinski, director of facilities.

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Team from Middle States here to evaluate College

Posted on Apr 9, 2010

The College will welcome a team representing the Middle States Commission on Higher Education who will be on campus from Sunday, April 11 to Wednesday, April 14, to meet with faculty, staff and students.

Kids walking on campus. For preview of Class of 2012 arrival

The visit is part of the College’s reaccreditation, which takes place every 10 years. Six working groups on campus, along with a steering committee led by David Cotter, associate professor of sociology and Therese McCarty, the Stephen J. and Diane K. Ciesinski Dean of the Faculty and Vice President for Academic Affairs, spent two years conducting a self-study of the institution. Sixty faculty, staff and students worked on the report, which focused on the implementation of the College’s strategic plan.

Middle States accreditation is an expression of confidence in an institution’s mission and goals, its performance and its resources.

The team visiting Union is chaired by Daniel Weiss, president of Lafayette College and includes: Alan S. Caniglia, senior Associate Dean of the Faculty and Vice Provost for Planning and Institutional Research, Franklin and Marshall College; Daniel F. Chambliss, Eugene M. Tobin Distinguished Professor of Sociology, Hamilton College; Lori M. Collins-Hall, professor of sociology, Hartwick College; Bronte Jones, treasurer, St. John’s College; Mary J.S. Roth, Associate Provost, Lafayette College; and Julie L. Ramsey, vice president for College Life and Dean of Students, Gettysburg College.

The Middle States Commission on Higher Education is a voluntary, non-governmental, peer-based membership association dedicated to educational excellence and improvement through peer evaluation and accreditation.

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