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Chinese political propaganda posters exhibit at Union

Posted on Sep 27, 2005

Union College will host an exhibit of propaganda posters from the People's Republic of China. “The Political Body: Posters from the People's Republic of China in the 1960's and 1970's” runs Oct. 6 through Dec. 18, 2005 in the Nott Memorial's Mandeville Gallery.

Thirty posters, on loan from the University of Westminster Chinese poster Collection, reveal the relationship between representations of the individual human body and the 'body politic' of China during the 60's and 70's.


These posters were created during the period known as “The Cultural Revolution” in China. Graphic images were produced for pure political rhetoric to be translated into visual personifications of masculine and violent aggression during that time.


The exhibition shows how the body is portrayed at different political movements and links idealized human figures to political campaigns from China's Maoist ideology to the beginning of economic and cultural reform.


The artwork shows the transition from purely political representation in which images of everyday life are absent, to a broader depiction which incorporates a more expansive vision of political life, acknowledging aspects of social and cultural behavior as contributing to the political vision of China.


The exhibit's reception and gallery talk will be hosted by Joyce Madancy, associate professor of history at Union College, on Monday, Oct. 24, from 4:30- 6:30 p.m. The Mandeville Gallery, located in the Nott Memorial, is free and open to the public. Gallery hours are Monday through Sunday from 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. For additional information, please call 518-388-6004 or the Mandeville Gallery Offices: 518-388-6729.


Please visit: http://www.union.edu/Gallery/Upcoming.htm


 

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Exhibit: ‘The Terracotta Soldiers of Xian’ shows at Union

Posted on Sep 27, 2005

'Three Horses' – Sidney Gluck

 


An exhibit featuring The Terracotta Soldiers of Xian: Photographs by Sidney J. Gluck” will be on display at Union College's Dyson Hall, in the Nott Memorial. It will run through October 30, 2005.


Gluck presents images of the magnificent life-sized terracotta soldiers and horses unearthed at Xian in the 1970s. The huge army was created by the First Emperor of China to immortalize the military might of the First Dynasty and serve the Emperor in his afterlife.  


These photographs were taken in 1997 at Xi'an, China with government permission and assistance.


As an artist, Gluck has used a variety of mediums; painting, photography, and fabric design. He has shown at various galleries and educational institutions throughout New York and New England.

'Bricks' – Sidney Gluck


The exhibit is free and open to the public every day, year round, during the hours that the Nott Memorial is open: Monday-Sunday daily from 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. For additional information, please call 518-388-6004 or the Mandeville Gallery Offices: 518-388-6729.


Please visit: http://www.union.edu/Gallery/Upcoming.htm


 

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Students respectful of neighbors

Posted on Sep 25, 2005

Deborah Gaillardmiller remembers the nights when her children couldn't sleep because of the noise of Union College parties.


On her block of University Place, most of the houses are rented to college students, and nearly every night the music was cranked up, the kegs were dragged out and students celebrated until they puked on the grass.


But last year, the parties were noticeably quieter, and this year, it's possible to sleep even on weekends, Gaillardmiller said.


“They were much better last year,” she said. “When we first got here six years ago, oh my God, it was terrible. The school nights when the kids were trying to sleep – that really got to be a problem. Now, it's much better – it's very quiet now.”


Union college students are saying the same thing.


“It was louder last year,” said senior Noah Cayman, who lives a few doors down from Gaillardmiller. “There would be a party in one of the Union houses, I don't want to say every night, but more nights than not. Whereas this year, if you come in at midnight, 1 a.m. on a Friday or Saturday you might hear something, but not during the week.”


Hearing “something” is a far cry from the complaints neighbors used to have of students holding shouting contests in the street, urinating on the lawns and vomiting as they staggered home.


Last September, police received, on average, one noise complaint every three days. This year, they received an average of one complaint per week.


Neighbors say parties still draw a group, but not a crowd of 40 or more students.


There is still drinking – students threw beer bottles from their porches during a recent celebration – and music can still be heard after dark.


But neighbors rarely hear more than music now, they said, and the drinking takes place indoors rather than spilling out onto the sidewalks.


A reporter watched students party last weekend and found only two parties that could be heard from the street. Both parties ended voluntarily by 1 a.m.


For the past three weeks, a reporter also drove through the area after 10 p.m. each school night but could not find any large parties near the college.


On most nights, all that could be heard was the crickets.


“It is nice – the quiet is very nice,” Gaillardmiller said.


No one is quite sure why it's so quiet – or whether it will stay that way.


POLICE RESPONSE


Neighbors say police responded unusually quickly to noise complaints last year, teaching students to keep it down.


Police spokesman Lt. Peter Frisoni said officers got “very aggressive” in recent years in an attempt to solve the problem, saying officers made an effort to respond quickly to every noise complaint.


Once there, police would give students a warning: If they had to come back later, they would break up the party and possibly arrest the hosts for violating the noise ordinance.


“We haven't had to go back very often,” Frisoni said. “In the past few years we've had much more success – we've been very aggressive in policing the neighborhood . . . It seems to have worked. It has definitely improved.”


Police records show that for University Place alone, residents called to complain seven times in 20 days last September.


This year, there were only three calls in the same 20-day period.


Frisoni stressed that while most noise complaints on that street are for Union College student parties, the system does not differentiate the cause of the noise.


MORE ON CAMPUS


Frisoni and college officials also suggest the change may be attributed to the fact that fewer students live off campus.


In 2003, 375 students were given permission to rent apartments. This year, that fell to 221 students, largely because the college opened a new dormitory, College Park Hall (the former Ramada Inn on Nott Street).


“Certainly as fewer students live off-campus, there will be less student activity in those neighborhoods,” said college spokesman William F. Schwarz.


Some students say the real difference is that most of the offcampus students are now seniors, unlike past years when some juniors were also allowed to rent apartments.


They suspect the quiet can be mostly blamed on the dreaded senior thesis that most Union College seniors begin in September.


“Fall-term seniors don't have the time to party because of the thesis,” Cayman said.


But if that's the case, the parties will pick up after winter term, when most seniors have finished their theses.


“I think the few houses off campus are going to have big blowouts,” warned senior Erica Gierke.


However, students also said they go to local bars now because there are so few parties to attend near the college.


They blamed the college for that, saying restrictions on fraternity parties ruined the party atmosphere.


Fraternity parties must be registered if more than 12 people are going to attend, which means the hosts must take a class on how to check IDs and hold a safe party. All partyers over the age of 21 must wear a wristband if they want to drink, and servers cannot give drinks to anyone without a wristband.


That rule has been in place for years, but students say fraternities actually follow it now that they don't own individual houses on campus.


The college has taken over all the remaining fraternity houses in recent years and converted them to office and dormitory space.


The fraternities have been moved into other college-owned buildings.


PLEASANT SURPRISE


College officials were surprised to learn that neighbors felt the students were less rowdy this year.


“Oh my God – that's tremendous – I can't believe this,” said Thomas McEvoy, college dean of residential and campus life.


But he added that he has no idea why it's happened – although he said the students' theory about senior thesis work is plausible.


“In years past there were more juniors off campus, and they may have had more time on their hands,” he said.


Union has worked to increase the number of activities on campus through its “Minerva House” system, implemented in the fall of 2004. All students and faculty are assigned to one of seven houses, each with its own building with a fully equipped kitchen, seminar rooms, study areas, a great room with big-screen television and a budget for activities.


Still, McEvoy said the Minerva system is probably not a reason for the decline in loud parties.


 “I honestly don't think the people attending Minerva events are the same people that would have partied heavily,” he said, describing the events as quiet, “middleof-the-road” activities like video games and coffeehouses.


“I don't know why,” he said of noise complaints being down. “But it's great to hear.”


 

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34th season of chamber music at Union College

Posted on Sep 24, 2005

Julius Drake


 


Chamber music fans once again will have the privilege to witness some of the world's finest and best-known musicians play for them at this year's Union College Chamber Concert Series. 


The 34th year of this 14-concert season opens on Friday, Sept. 30, at 8 p.m. with an all-Schubert program, A Schubert Lieder Abend, by tenor Ian Bostridge and pianist Julius Drake. The season concludes on Thursday, April 6, at 8 p.m. with a return by pianist, Yefim Bronfman.


Series' favorites, the Boston Camerata and famed Musicians from Marlboro, will grace the stage once more. The Boston Camerata will make their 18th annual appearance to this series.  


The year 2006 marks the 250th anniversary of Mozart's birthday, the 100th anniversary of Shostakovich's birthday and the 150th anniversary of the death of Robert Schumann. These seminal events will be noted within the program over the series' next two seasons.


In November, the prize-winning Belcea String Quartet perform Schumann's A major quartet, op. 41, No. 3.


Later in January, for Mozart's birthday weekend, pianist Pei-Yao Wang and friends (from the Marlboro Music Festival) will perform three Mozart Concerti arranged by the composer for piano and string quintet, K. 413, 414 and 415.


 


Emerson String Quartet

The Emerson String Quartet will play the last three quartets of Shostakovich in April and pianist Mitsuko Uchida, in her Capital Region debut, ends the season with a program of Mozart Sonatas.


All concerts are in the acoustically-superb Memorial Chapel. Parking is available at nearby campus lots. The Union College trolley will be available to shuttle concert goers from the Nott/Seward lot one hour before the start of the concert and one hour after the end of each concert.


The complete schedule is on the web at http://www.union.edu/ConcertSeries/.


Single tickets are available for purchase in advance at the Union College Central Scheduling office. For tickets phone (518) 388-6080; for mailing list and brochures (518) 388-6131; and for other information please call (518) 372-3651.


*****Please note:  A misprint occurred in the pinted brochure; the correct phone number for purchasing tickets is (518) 388-6080.


 


 

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Events

Posted on Sep 23, 2005

Julius Drake

Thursday, Sept. 22, 4:30 p.m. / Nott Memorial / Reception for “Inside/Outside: Paintings and Drawings by Bruce McColl and Don Resnick,” with Q&A


Thursday, Sept. 22, 4:30 p.m. / Phi Beta Kappa Room. / Tamar Gendler, Cornell University, speaks on How the Mind Really Works


Friday, Sept. 23, 4 p.m. / Garis Field / Women's soccer vs. Rensselaer


Friday, Sept. 23, 4 p.m. / Frank Bailey Field / Field hockey vs. Hamilton


Friday, Sept. 23, 10 p.m. / Old Chapel / Comedy show: We Can Make You Laugh!


Friday, Sept. 23 – Monday, Sept. 26, 8 and 10 p.m. / Reamer Campus Center Auditorium / Movie: Murderball


Saturday, Sept. 24, 2 p.m. / Garis Field / Women's soccer vs. Vassar


Saturday, Sept. 24, 2 p.m. / Frank Bailey Field / Field hockey vs. St. Lawrence


Tuesday, Sept. 27, 4 p.m. / Tennis Courts / Women's tennis vs. Hartwick


Tuesday, Sept. 27, 7 p.m. / Memorial Fieldhouse / Volleyball vs. Middlebury

Ian Bostridge

Wednesday, Sept. 28, 3 p.m. /Becker Career Center / “U Connect – Bringing Students and Employers Together,” focusing on finance and consulting


Wednesday, Sept. 28, 7 p.m. / Garis Field / Men's soccer vs. Mass. Coll. of Liberal Arts

Thursday, Sept. 29, 7:30 p.m. / Nott Memorial / Perspectives at the Nott: Speaker Lorene Cary, author of Black Ice


Friday, Sept. 30, 8 p.m. / Memorial Chapel / Chamber Concert: Ian Bostridge, tenor, and Julius Drank, piano, in Schubert program


Friday, Sept. 30 – Monday, Oct. 3, 8 and 10 p.m. / Reamer Campus Center Auditorium / Movie: Madagascar


Saturday, Oct. 1, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sunday, Oct. 2, noon to 5 p.m. / Pepsi Arena / “Ultimate College Weekend.” Live music, fashion, game tournaments, giveaways

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