all Union in the Media Archive

Publication Date

UCARE Day set for Sunday

By: Madalyn Borek '19

The Kenney Center's annual UCARE Day is set for Sunday from noon to 3 p.m. in Memorial Fieldhouse.

UCARE Day is the annual free carnival for local kids and their families. The first UCARE Day was in 1998. Student leaders planning the event are Alexa Steriti '17 and Jacqueline Sharry '18 (both were leaders last year, too).

Greek organizations involved include Sigma Delta Tau, Delta Delta Delta, Alpha Delta Lambda, Alpha Phi Omega, Kappa Alpha and Phi Iota Alpha. Union Pride, Campus Kitchens, Fencing Club, Society of Women’s Engineers, and African Student Association are also participating, as well as athletic teams like men's hockey, men’s soccer, football, and men’s and women's basketball.

There will be tables with activities such as face painting, games, and arts and crafts. Athletics team members will be playing various games with the kids in addition to bounce houses, a photo booth, cotton candy and pizza. Stewart's Shops has also donated ice cream for the event.

Publication Date

Union College students pitch stupid ideas

Times Union

The College recently hosted a backwards pitch competition for students in the Innovation, Creativity and the Entrepreneurial Mindset course.

Students were asked to come up with the worst, most bizarre or most ridiculous idea. Pitches must be between 150 seconds and 180 seconds and delivered without notes.

Each year the College offers an interdisciplinary course open to all students that focuses on a single topic and is taught by a variety of professors. Known as the Minerva Course, the class also includes lectures by accomplished guests. Past topics have included presidential elections, income inequality, oil, food, technology and society, and globalization.

This year’s course, which enrolls 91 students across a broad range of majors, is unique and unconventional from past Minerva classes. Working with faculty since last spring, the College’s University Innovation Fellows helped design the curriculum.

Learn more about the course.

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Lothridge Festival of Dance

Times Union

As part of the 27th annual Steinmetz Symposium, more than 80 performers took to the stage in the Nott Memorial for the Lothridge Festival of Dance.

Featured were works from the Winter Dance Concert, “Beyond Steps,” by dance minors Emily Alston ’19, Ayanah Dowdye ’18, Lily Herout ’17, Grace Kernohan ’17, J’Kela Smith ’17 and Maddison Stemple-Piatt ’17.

In addition, students from the Bhangra, Hip-Hop, Step and African Dance clubs, Terra Dance, the Dance Team and Just Queenin performed.

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GE research chief opens Steinmetz Symposium at Union

Daily Gazette

The 27th annual Steinmetz Symposium kicked off with a corporate breakfast featuring remarks by Victor (Vic) Abate, chief technology officer and senior vice president for General Electric.

Abate discussed accelerating breakthrough technologies for competitive advantage. Bianca Mielke ’18, an electrical engineering major with a minor in dance and mathematics, talked of her Union experience. Joining invited faculty, students and staff were a host of local business leaders representing GE, GlobalFoundries, Naval Nuclear Laboratory, Capital Region Chamber and others.

Click here to read more in the Daily Gazette (subscription may be required).

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'Family Imprint' photographer at Union College event

Times Union

At ReUnion this year, photographer Nancy Borowick ’07 will sign and discuss her new book, "The Family Imprint (The Cancer Family Book)." An intimate portrait of the author’s family as her parents underwent parallel treatments for stage-four cancer, it enriches the larger story Borowick has been telling for years in Cancer Family Ongoing. This photography project has been published nationally and internationally, receiving awards and recognition on both stages.

Publication Date

Exercising while gaming could slow cognitive declines, study finds

Older adults with mild cognitive impairment (MCI), often a precursor to Alzheimer’s, showed significant improvement with certain complex thinking and memory skills after exergaming, according to a new study.

The results could encourage seniors, caregivers and health care providers to pursue or prescribe exergames (video games that also require physical exercise) in hopes of slowing the debilitating effects of those with MCI, sometimes a stage between normal brain aging and dementia.

The study was led by Cay Anderson-Hanley, associate professor of psychology.

It appears in the current issue of Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience.

The Times Union featured the study on the front page.

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Alumni in the news: Shilpa Darivemula '13

Shilpa Darivemula '13, a student at Albany Medical College who is also trained in Kuchipudi (a classical Indian dance form), is the founder of The Aseemkala Initiative.

The organization, which presents its first performance of the Mahavidyas in Medicine project at the Fertile Ground Showcase on May 14, uses traditional dances to narrate stories of women in medicine from cultures around the world.

At Union, Shipla participated in Shakti Club, Steinmetz Symposium and Messa House.

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WOE: Union College diversity officer on mentorship, the college's culture

The Capital Region Chamber of Commerce will honor Gretchel Hathaway, chief diversity officer and dean of diversity and inclusion, later this month at its 27th Annual Women of Excellence Luncheon. Hathaway will be honored with the group’s Excellence in Professions award.

Hathaway was recently profiled in the Times Union.

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Congressional Corner with Brad Hays

Bradley Hays, associate professor of political science, was a recent guest on "Congressional Corner" on WAMC, Northeast Public Radio. He discussed who will replace Paul Ryan as House Republican leader.

Northeast Public Radio is a member of National Public Radio serving parts of seven northeastern states. These include New York, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Vermont, New Jersey, New Hampshire and Pennsylvania.

Publication Date

Mobilizing student engineers

Engineering students from around the state recently showed off their technological chops at the state Capitol. Invention prototypes from eight colleges and 14 teams were on display at the fourth annual CREATE (Cultivating Resources for Employment with Assistive Technology) symposium, held at the Legislative Office Building.

An initiative sponsored by the nonprofit New York State Industries for the Disabled, CREATE partners engineering students with member agencies, encouraging them to apply what they learn in the classroom to real-world experiences.

Union College's entry was featured in the Times Union.