±«Óătv celebrated the sciences this weekend with two major events: the dedication of the new Robert H.N. Ho Science Center and the launch of the Harvey Picker Institute for Interdisciplinary Studies in the Sciences and Mathematics.
Guests visit the visualization lab at the Ho Science Center. (Photo by Ian Domes) |
Alumni, guests, and friends of the university were on hand for a range of activities that showcased ±«Óătvâs tradition of excellence in the sciences and its vision for exploring the new frontiers of knowledge in the 21st century.
Stories:
- Science building, institute spur new methods of exploration
- Utica Observer-Dispatch story
- News 10 Now story
Photos:
Video:
- Take a look inside building
- Robert H.N. Hoâs remarks
- Adam Burnett talks about GIS labs, weather station
- Architect Kevin Triplett discusses building
- David Baird details technology in center
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Robert H.N. Ho â56 (center) watches ±«Óătv students work Saturday in the new interdisciplinary science center that bears his name. (Photo by Ian Domes) |
Science building, institute spur new methods of exploration
âA glorious day for ±«Óătv.â
That is how President Rebecca Chopp on Saturday described the dedication of the Robert H.N. Ho Science Center and the formal launch of the Harvey Picker Institute for Interdisciplinary Studies in the Sciences and Mathematics.
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In front of dozens of ±«Óătv alumni, professors, students, and friends gathered in the gleaming second floor of the science center, Chopp spoke of the unprecedented opportunities and access that will push the university into the forefront of interdisciplinary scientific research in the 21st century.
Chopp spoke movingly of the contributions of Robert H.N. Ho â56, whose $27 million confirmed commitment to the science center project turned a long-held dream into a stunning 121,000-square-foot reality.
The president cited the significant contributions Ho had made to ±«Óătv in past years, and how their shared vision for the universityâs future developed into a genuine friendship that she cherishes.
She also thanked the many alumni, faculty and staff members, and workers from around Central New York who played key roles in âthis magnificent building.â
Provost and dean of the faculty Lyle Roelofs and trustee Denis F. Cronin â69 both mentioned how the vision and contributions of Charles McClennen, the longtime geology professor who died in January, were crucial to the project, which was first discussed some 10 years ago.
âThe building is Charlieâs last gift to us,â said Roelofs, whose remarks, along with the other speakersâ, are to be placed in a time capsule at the center that will be opened in 2057..
Roelofs took Ho and his guests, some of whom traveled from Hong Kong and Canada, on a tour of the building earlier in the day.
Ho said the high-tech classrooms and labs, including the 3D visualization lab, will be the envy of other liberal arts institutions everywhere.
While acknowledging how proud and happy he is to contribute to the center, Ho said: âAlthough I have delivered the bricks and mortar to ±«Óătv, I believe the real gift, the most enduring gift, is the use to which the faculty and students of colgate will put this new building.â
Members of the audience stood and applauded as Ho, citing a Chinese proverb, concluded his remarks by saying â âI drank water, and I remembered its source.â
â Tim OâKeeffe, Office of Public Relations and Communications
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Harvey Picker â36 talks with guests at the luncheon held in his honor at the Hall of Presidents on Saturday. (Photo by Ian Domes) |
Institute will foster creation of knowledge through collaboration
Harvey Picker â36, a trustee emeritus whose family has supported ±«Óătv for more than 70 years, distilled the theme of ±«Óătvâs Celebrating the Sciences weekend into one simple yet powerful statement: âNo one science will get you where you need to go in the outside world.â
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With his most recent gift to ±«Óătv, Picker endowed the Harvey Picker Institute for Interdisciplinary Studies in the Sciences and Mathematics, whose inaugural director is Bruce Selleck â71, Harold Orville Whitnall Professor of geology.
The instituteâs mission â to foster the creation of new knowledge that is obtainable only through collaboration among faculty and students from disparate disciplines â will be realized in the Robert H.N. Ho Science Center, whose revolutionary design has intermingled offices, study lounges, classroom spaces, and laboratories for research in biology, geography, geology, environmental studies, and physics and astronomy.
Gerald D. Fischbach, MD â60, Pâ87, Hâ03, a trustee emeritus and one of ±«Óătvâs leading alumni in the sciences, gave the keynote address at Saturdayâs luncheon honoring Picker.
Fischbach said that in todayâs tumultuous times, ±«Óătv, with its new Ho Science Center, is perfectly poised â because of its size, its superb faculty, its values, and its beauty â to help reinvigorate the sciences in America.
âUniversities and colleges will be judged by what they have contributed to our understanding of the brain in its broadest sense,â said Fischbach, who studies Parkinsonâs disease and autism.
âBrain research is fundamentally interdisciplinary,â he said, in that it requires understanding of physics, chemistry, neuroscience, medicine, and even philosophy. âThere are huge ethical issues of what is really informed consent? What kinds of risks are allowable? A liberal education can help us understand not what can we do, but what should we do.â
â Barbara Brooks, Office of Public Relations and Communications
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The Robert H.N. Ho Science Center is 121,000 square feet and has more than 50 laboratories. (Photo by Ian Domes) |
Building offers setting to better educate 21st century researchers
Modern scientists must be creative communicators who know how to do research, find new problems, and navigate the intersections between the sciences and the humanities.
This was the assessment of nine panelists, representing colleges and universities, research institutes, and private industry, who gathered in the Meyerhoff Auditorium at the Robert H.N. Ho Science Center on Saturday morning to discuss âEmerging Issues in Science Careers.â
Their conversation quickly turned to the question of how Americaâs academic community can nurture these imaginative investigators when trends indicate a looming shortage of candidates for PhD-level programs.
The answer starts as early as kindergarten. Thatâs when students should be introduced to the idea of scientific exploration as a creative activity.
âScience needs to be cool,â said panelist Linda Jones, professor of engineering at Smith College.
Jones also noted that, âas a nation, we have not afforded all students the opportunity to experience science at a young age.â
If Americaâs PhD population is to grow, the sciences must become an intellectual destination for individuals of all races, ethnicities, and genders.
±«Óătv administrators say the Ho Science Center is an example of the steps the university is taking to address Americaâs need for a diverse population of researchers grounded in the liberal arts. Its laboratories, which promote faculty-student research projects and interdisciplinary cooperation, go hand-in-hand with a curriculum that encourages wide-ranging scholarship before and after the declaration of a major.
âThis building stands as an important message about our commitment to the sciences,â said dean of the college Charlotte Johnson.
â Mark Walden, Office of Public Relations and Communications
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Students work Friday in one of the new research laboratories in the Ho Science Center. (Photo by Timothy D. Sofranko) |
Aveni welcomes ânew lightâ of Ho Science Center
âThink unorthodox curricular thoughts and talk to someone in another discipline,â advised Tony Aveni, professor of astronomy and anthropology and Native American studies, adding âI think Ho Science Center certainly facilitates that.â
Aveni was the guest speaker at Fridayâs Science Colloquium, in which he gave a âtrue and partly made upâ history of five decades in the sciences at ±«Óătv.
Harking back to 1963, when he began teaching at ±«Óătv and there were only 350 students and 112 faculty members, Aveni discussed the evolution of the sciences on campus over the years.
Specifically crediting the progressive climate of the late â60s and early â70s, Aveni said this was when an interdisciplinary focus forged ahead.
âIt was all about re-envisioning ways of knowing, and thinking of new ways to study,â he said.
This was also around the time when Aveni and others started an archaeoastronomy program on campus, the idea of which sprouted at, where else, a faculty tunk.
âThereâs plenty of envisioning happening on campus right now, so here we are conducting a ritual predicting of whatâs going to happen in this new science building,â he said.
Refusing to peer into the future, Aveni did conclude with his high hopes for the continued development of the sciences on campus and the role the Ho Science Center will play in that.
âOur new and wonderful home is very closely aligned to the winter solstice sunset,â he joked. âI would like to wish us all to welcome the new light into the ±«Óătv environment.â
â Aleta Mayne, Office of Public Relations and Communications
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Kevin Triplett (left), senior associate at Shepley Bulfinch Richardson and Abbott, and Rich April, Dunham Beldon Jr. Professor of geology, prepare to discuss the architecture of the Ho Science Center. (Photo by Timothy D. Sofranko) |
Science center has significant architectural impact
âA science building should be as fascinating as science itself,â said Kevin Triplett, senior associate at architecture firm Shepley Bulfinch, describing the philosophy behind the Ho Science Centerâs design.
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Triplett was part of a Friday afternoon panel discussion on ±«Óătvâs architecture and the campusâs newest building.
Triplett outlined the principles and design challenges presented by the projectâs weighty parameters â a structure two times the size of the next-largest building on campus that needed to fit within the architectural vernacular; a site with a 40-foot change in elevation; and the intention to support new models of collaborative, interdisciplinary learning and research.
Geology professor Richard April began the discussion by outlining how the building came about, from 1997 when the departments housed in Lathrop Hall first identified a need for new space, to the decision to conceptualize a completely new kind of science building, to the approval process that led to its construction.
Geology professor Connie Soja shared the design plans for the Linsley Geology Museum, and biology professor Damhnait McHugh reflected upon the other panelistsâ presentations.
âIn terms of [the buildingâs] contributions to the campus, I remember being on the committee that helped to select the architects, and hearing architects talk about the challenges of this site,â said the panel moderator, art and art history professor Robert McVaugh.
âI want to share my congratulations to Shepley and everyone involved in accomplishing the kind of integration and scale that we have here. It is in architectural terms spectacular â and an appropriate solution.â
â Rebecca Costello, Office of Public Relations and Communications
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A panel discussion on technology in the sciences kicks off the weekendâs events at the Ho Science Center. The session was held in the Meyerhoff Auditorium. (Photo by Timothy D. Sofranko) |
Professors, students to take full advantage of technology
The increasingly busy intersection of technology and scientific research was explored this morning in a panel discussion moderated by Lyle Roelofs, provost and dean of the faculty.
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GIS labs and weather station |
Geography professor Adam Burnett discussed how his research will be augmented by the new facilities at the Ho Science Center.
A cartographer and climatologist, Burnett said the geographic information system (GIS) lab will be a critical addition.
The lab is the âglueâ to the kinds of spatial analysis that cut across scientific disciplines, he said, and will allow for a multidisciplinary approach to challenging issues such as climate control.
A weather station is planned for the building and Burnett, whose research on lake-effect snow has been widely publicized, said it will offer real-time data not only for research but for community members who often are forced to rely on unreliable weather reports from outside the Hamilton area.
Brian White â08, who majors in geology and minors in music, talked about his summer research studying volcanoes in Iceland. He uses an inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer in his research, and in the new building it will be housed in a âcleanâ lab.
âItâs an incredible space for us,â he said.
David Baird, director of academic technologies, discussed emerging trends in technology and pointed out the features of the Meyerhoff Auditorium, where the panel discussion was held.
Equipped with the latest wireless and multimedia options, the equipment in the auditorium and in the classrooms are linked to a central server. So if a professor is having trouble with a projector or the document imager, he can call IT members who can access the equipment from their office and quickly correct the problem.
â Tim OâKeeffe, Office of Public Relations and Communications
±«Óătv celebrates sciences with new building, institute
±«Óătv is celebrating the sciences this weekend in dramatic fashion with two major events: the dedication of the new Robert H.N. Ho Science Center and the launch of the Harvey Picker Institute for Interdisciplinary Studies in the Sciences and Mathematics.
Alumni, guests, and friends of the university will be on hand for a range of weekend activities.
âThis weekend demonstrates the robust nature of our faculty and student initiatives in the sciences and recognizes the generosity of our alumni and friends,â said President Rebecca Chopp.
The $56.3 million science center will house 40 research labs, 45 faculty offices, 13 teaching labs, seven classrooms, a 90-seat lecture hall/auditorium, 60-seat visualization lab, museum, and a teaching/research greenhouse.
It is named in honor of Robert Hung Ngai Ho â56, who has confirmed a commitment of $27 million to the project.
Faculty members see great opportunities to enhance multidisciplinary study, and the buildingâs wealth of shared common spaces, including shared classrooms and configurable laboratories, is intended to enhance collaborative learning.
The interdisciplinary nature of the sciences at ±«Óătv will be fostered by the new science institute, funded by Harvey Picker â36.
The institute supports internal and external collaborations among faculty who bring expertise from disparate disciplines to bear on current and emerging scientific problems. It also encourages interdisciplinary approaches to learning through innovative curricular and research opportunities for students.
Here is a schedule (PDF) of this weekendâs events.