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Hamilton College leader to stay busy before 2016 retirement
CLINTON — Hamilton College President Joan Hinde Stewart has a lot of work to tackle over the next 18 months. Stewart, who announced her plans the first week of December, will retire on June 30, 2016, but doesn’t plan to coast through her last year and a half on the job. High on her list […]
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CLINTON — Hamilton College President Joan Hinde Stewart has a lot of work to tackle over the next 18 months. Stewart, who announced her plans the first week of December, will retire on June 30, 2016, but doesn’t plan to coast through her last year and a half on the job.
High on her list of priorities is nurturing the college’s need-blind admission policy. In 2010, the college adopted the policy, meaning it considers applicants on their academic and other merits, not their ability to pay. Hamilton College then finds a way to make it work financially for the student.
“We’re very proud of that,” Stewart says. For the 2014-15 academic year, tuition is $47,820 with an additional $12,150 for room and board. About half of the college’s students receive financial aid, with the average financial-aid package (comprised of scholarships, student loans, and work-study jobs) totaling about $40,900.
Hamilton College’s financial-aid budget totals $34 million, and Stewart says one of her main focuses over the next 18 months will be to work to raise funds to continue to meet the financial needs of students.
“We’re proud of the steps we have made to increase accessibility to the college,” Stewart says. That doesn’t mean it isn’t still a competitive process. Hamilton College accepted just 26 percent of applicants into the class of 2018, and 85 percent of its 1,850 students are ranked in the top 10 percent of their high-school class.
Another highlight Stewart takes pride in is the increasing role of the college’s career center, which has expanded the scope of how it helps prepare students for careers after college.
“I think it should be a national model,” Stewart says of Hamilton College’s career center, which assists with traditional activities such as résumé writing, and also teaches students how to network, helps arrange internship opportunities, and provides career and job-search role models.
Under Stewart’s leadership, the college has also added new academic programs and hired new faculty members; invested nearly $250 million in new and renovated science, social science, studio and performing arts, student activities, and fitness and recreation facilities; completed two successful capital campaigns; and implemented a strategic plan to advance the values of education for self-direction, a self-governing community, thoughtful dialog and debate, and engagement for the world, Hamilton College says.
“I’ve had the privilege of working with wonderful colleagues,” Stewart says. She feels secure in the college’s standing to move on and let another person take the reins at this point. She announced her plans to retire to the college as soon as she was sure of them, wanting to give Hamilton officials ample time to find her replacement. While no action has been taken yet, Stewart expects the search for Hamilton College’s next president will be a national search.
Stewart began her tenure as the college’s first female president on July 1, 2003. Prior to joining Hamilton College, she was a faculty member at North Carolina State University from 1973 to 1999. While there, Stewart was chair of the Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures from 1985 to 1997. She also served as assistant dean for research and graduate programs for the College of Humanities and Social Sciences. Stewart is a 1965 graduate of St. Joseph’s College in Brooklyn and received her Ph.D. from Yale University in 1970.
Stewart’s area of study is 18th century French literature and she plans to continue reading, writing, and researching in her retirement. She has kept up a research program throughout her time as Hamilton’s president. “I’ll be able to do that with renewed vigor,” Stewart adds. Her hope is to remain active and useful in the higher-education field in retirement.
Stewart and her husband, Philip, have not yet decided if they will stay in New York or return to North Carolina, where they have a home. The couple has two grown children.
Contact The Business Journal News Network at news@cnybj.com
Cornell’s Hotel School gets $10M gift to endow deanship
ITHACA — Cornell University will use a $10 million donation from an alumnus to endow and name the deanship of its School of Hotel Administration (SHA). The school announced the gift in a Dec. 12 news release. Bradley (Brad) Stone, president and partner in Las Vegas, Nev.–based Global Gaming Asset Management, LLC, has committed a
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ITHACA — Cornell University will use a $10 million donation from an alumnus to endow and name the deanship of its School of Hotel Administration (SHA).
The school announced the gift in a Dec. 12 news release.
Bradley (Brad) Stone, president and partner in Las Vegas, Nev.–based Global Gaming Asset Management, LLC, has committed a $10 million gift for the deanship endowment.
Stone is a 1977 graduate of Cornell’s SHA.
Brad Stone is the “ideal” person for whom the deanship could be named, Michael Johnson, dean and E.M. Statler professor in the School of Hotel Administration, contended in the release.
“Brad is a committed alumnus with an inspiring career in the hospitality industry, and his name will honor the School of Hotel Administration and the position of dean,” Johnson said.
Endowments to name the school’s senior-leadership posts are among the “most important” gifts any university can receive, David Skorton, president of Cornell University, said in the news release.
“These investments allow us to attract the very best leaders to guide the future of our institution, and they provide critical funds for deans to address foremost priorities,” Skorton said. “Knowing we have the resources to recruit individuals who are singularly qualified to shape the school’s teaching and research enterprise will be of enormous benefit to me, to my successor Elizabeth Garrett, and to future presidents of Cornell.”
Stone had previously provided financial support to establish the Stone Family Faculty Renewal Fellowship and the Bradley Stone ‘77 Scholarship, the school said.
Additionally, Stone has served as a two-term member of the dean’s advisory board, and on the Cornell University Council since 2013.
About Stone
A 1977 graduate of SHA, Stone is in partnership with the former Las Vegas Sands management team of Bill Weidner and Garry Saunders, according to the Cornell news release.
The company has been conducting joint ventures with Cantor Fitzgerald, L.P. in the global gaming, hospitality, and resort sectors, Cornell said. Cantor Fitzgerald is a New York City–based financial-services firm.
Stone is the former president of global operations and development of Las Vegas Sands Corporation. In that role, he oversaw the design, construction, and operation of some of the world’s “most recognized” casino-resort properties, the school said.
They included the company’s “flagship” hotels — the more than 4,000-suite Venetian Las Vegas and the 3,000-room Palazzo Resort and Casino.
The Palazzo Resort and Casino is also located in Las Vegas.
Stone also played a “key role” in the Las Vegas Sands expansion to global markets. He directed the development of the Sands Macao, the corporation’s first international property, and the first U.S.-operated facility in the People’s Republic of China, Cornell said.
Cornell described the opening of the $2.4 billion Venetian Macao as “perhaps his biggest professional milestone.”
The 10.5-million-square-foot facility has been dubbed the “largest hotel in the world.”
In addition, Stone oversaw the ongoing development of Sands Casino Resort Bethlehem in Eastern Pennsylvania and the “iconic” Marina Bay Sands in Singapore.
He also played a “key role” in the company’s financing and future international and domestic developments, according to Cornell.
Stone is currently overseeing the management of the Baha Mar Casino & Hotel, the flagship of the largest destination-resort complex in the Bahamas, scheduled to open in the spring of 2015.
Contact Reinhardt at ereinhardt@cnybj.com
Syracuse University’s new chief fundraiser, Ter Molen, starts his job on Feb. 1
SYRACUSE — Syracuse University (SU) Chancellor Kent Syverud has announced the appointment of Matt Ter Molen as chief advancement officer and senior vice president following a national search. The executive committee of the SU board of trustees confirmed the appointment during its meeting on Dec. 4. Ter Molen, who will report to Syverud, will start
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SYRACUSE — Syracuse University (SU) Chancellor Kent Syverud has announced the appointment of Matt Ter Molen as chief advancement officer and senior vice president following a national search.
The executive committee of the SU board of trustees confirmed the appointment during its meeting on Dec. 4.
Ter Molen, who will report to Syverud, will start in his new role on Feb. 1.
He currently serves as associate vice president and campaign manager for “We Will. The Campaign for Northwestern” at Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill.
Northwestern’s $3.75 billion fundraising effort seeks to support the school’s strategic plan, “Northwestern Will,” according to the SU release.
As of Aug. 31, the campaign had raised more than $1.73 billion.
Syverud calls Ter Molen “a talented and accomplished fundraising strategist and gift steward.”
“He brings a wealth of experience, having led large and successful higher-education fundraising campaigns. As we seek to continue the university’s strong fundraising momentum, I’m confident Matt is the right person to lead us in securing the resources necessary to enhance our academic mission, support our students and faculty, and take our university to the next level,” said Syverud.
In his new role, Ter Molen will provide counsel to the chancellor to determine long-term expectations for a “best-in-class” advancement organization, including planning, timeline, allocation of resources, capacity projections, and infrastructure needs.
Ter Molen will cultivate, secure, and steward “complex” principal gifts, in partnership with the chancellor and gift officers, while creating an “environment of continuous improvement” for the advancement organization, the school added.
Staring at your wireless device could be hurting your spine
Do you have a pain in your neck? Your smartphone may be the culprit. A study in the November issue of the medical journal Surgical Technology International found that the billions of people in the world who use a mobile device, like a smartphone or tablet, are prone to poor posture due to the way
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Do you have a pain in your neck? Your smartphone may be the culprit.
A study in the November issue of the medical journal Surgical Technology International found that the billions of people in the world who use a mobile device, like a smartphone or tablet, are prone to poor posture due to the way they tilt their head to look at their device.
In a neutral position, an average adult head weighs 10 to 12 pounds. The study found that as the head tilts forward by various degrees, as it often does when checking or sending phone messages, the force on the neck increases to 27 pounds at 15 degrees, 40 pounds at 30 degrees, 49 pounds at 45 degrees and 60 pounds at 60 degrees.
The farther forward a person bends his head, the more stress is put on the spine, concluded the study’s author, New York City–based spine surgeon Kenneth Hansraj, M.D. This additional stress could lead to early wear, tear, degeneration, and possibly surgery, according to the study.
On average, people spend two to four hours each day reading or texting on their devices or reading a book. This translates to 700 to 1,400 hours a year of excess stress on the spine.
While giving up your phone or books may not be an option, Hansraj suggests that people make an effort to look at their devices with a neutral spine and avoid spending hours a day hunched over a device.
CNY STEM Scholars Program is offering more than $65,000 in scholarships through common application
SYRACUSE — SRC, Inc. and C&S Companies, in partnership with the CNY STEM Hub, have announced the 2015 CNY STEM Scholars Program. The program, now in its third year, is open to graduating high-school seniors who will be majoring in a science, technology, engineering, or mathematics (STEM) field. This year’s scholarship program will provide tuition
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SYRACUSE — SRC, Inc. and C&S Companies, in partnership with the CNY STEM Hub, have announced the 2015 CNY STEM Scholars Program.
The program, now in its third year, is open to graduating high-school seniors who will be majoring in a science, technology, engineering, or mathematics (STEM) field.
This year’s scholarship program will provide tuition support of up to $2,500 per year and a guaranteed summer internship at SRC, Inc. or C&S Companies, according to a news release issued by SRC on Dec. 16. Eight scholarships will be awarded, with up to three given to minority and female applicants.
There is no financial eligibility requirement. Applicants must have at least a 3.0 GPA, be a Central New York resident (living in the following counties: Onondaga, Cayuga, Madison, Cortland, Oneida, Oswego, and Tompkins), and be starting a degree program in the fall of 2015, the release stated. Students attending a college or university in New York state and students intending to study in certain STEM fields will be given preference during the selection process. Scholarship recipients will be chosen based on academic merit, activities, and application responses.
“SRC has been amazed with the level of the students applying for these scholarships in the past. It indicates that we can grow our own high quality STEM workforce right here in Central New York,” Paul G. Tremont, SRC president, said in the release. “The local education system is preparing students to take on the challenge of a STEM career and we can offer financial support and an internship experience through this scholarship. Our ultimate goal is to hire these students and keep the best and brightest in CNY.”
John Trimble, president and COO of the C&S Companies, added, “Supporting, hiring and retaining a high level of talent here in Central New York are the best ways to build a solid workforce and grow your organization. We are thrilled to be a part of it.”
The online application and additional information can be found on the CNY STEM Hub website at www.cnystem.com. The application deadline is March 15, 2015. Selections will be made in April and all applicants will be notified by May 1.

New center to expand wireless-solutions research, teaching at SUNY Oswego
OSWEGO — SUNY Oswego announced that its new Advanced Wireless Systems Research Center has opened the first of two labs to foster research, coursework, and experiential learning in next-generation wireless technology. The center’s new research training lab in the college’s Richard S. Shineman Center for Science, Engineering and Innovation is geared toward training students for
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OSWEGO — SUNY Oswego announced that its new Advanced Wireless Systems Research Center has opened the first of two labs to foster research, coursework, and experiential learning in next-generation wireless technology.
The center’s new research training lab in the college’s Richard S. Shineman Center for Science, Engineering and Innovation is geared toward training students for jobs in environmental health and environmental medicine under terms of a NYSUNY 2020 Challenge Grant awarded last year to SUNY Oswego and three other Central New York SUNY colleges.
“The new laboratory provides our students the opportunity to work across academic disciplines to practice the problem-solving skills they are going to need in the real world, under supervision of our faculty and other experts who are coming up with solutions that will shape the health care of the future,” Deborah F. Stanley, president of SUNY Oswego, said in a news release.
Patanjali Parimi, who directs the Advanced Wireless Systems Research Center, said two new courses — “Computational Engineering” and “Computational Methods in Chemistry” — will launch in January; one is full and the other almost full. The center has two other courses in development for the fall of 2015.
“This interdisciplinary center of excellence in wireless science, engineering and technology brings together a wide range of technological fields in electrical and computer engineering, computer science, physics, mathematics, medicine, health care and others,” Parimi said in the release.
The new wireless-research training laboratory has equipment including signal generators, signal analyzers, network and impedance analyzers, and computers running cutting-edge software packages.
Expert assistance
SUNY Oswego is inviting companies to fund research in the lab, and faculty at the college may take advantage of the equipment for their own projects, Parimi said. Students will benefit from opportunities to carry out projects, assist faculty members, and to study under the center’s research staff.
The university’s focus on wireless technology seeks to tie together curriculum and research to help serve industries around the globe whose collective applications of wireless total trillions of dollars, Parimi added.
While the new research training laboratory’s primary focus is curriculum development and research in environmental health and environmental medicine, it can also carry out new research in commercial and military communication and radar systems, antennas and phased arrays, automobile communication systems, and smart power grids, Parimi said. In health care alone, the center’s research interests include mobile health-care diagnostics, implantable devices, human-machine interface, non-invasive smart sensor systems, and computational methods in new drug design.
To extend the Advanced Wireless Research Systems Center’s research capabilities and its ability to collaborate with academic and industrial partners, the college said it is building a new communications and radars laboratory in Wilber Hall, slated to open next year.
That’s the next component in the university’s participation under the NYSUNY 2020 grant that totals $15 million and includes SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry, SUNY Upstate Medical University, and Onondaga Community College.
MVCC offers tractor-trailer driver training course
UTICA — People who are not happy at their current jobs and are thinking about becoming a tractor-trailer driver, can pursue it through training at Mohawk Valley Community College (MVCC). The college offers a truck-driver training session every two to three weeks throughout the year. It provides a daytime class that starts every two weeks,
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UTICA — People who are not happy at their current jobs and are thinking about becoming a tractor-trailer driver, can pursue it through training at Mohawk Valley Community College (MVCC).
The college offers a truck-driver training session every two to three weeks throughout the year. It provides a daytime class that starts every two weeks, and an evening class that begins monthly, says Franca Armstrong, associate vice president of workforce development at MVCC. “So about three times a month, you can get into a class.”
Armstrong spoke with the Business Journal News Network on Dec. 15.
The course targets “underemployed” adults, she notes.
“People who have been out in the workforce and, for whatever reason, would like to earn more. This allows them to do so with very short-term training,” she adds.
The tractor-trailer driver training course typically lasts between four and six weeks. It costs $4,900 for the training, she adds.
MVCC has a contract with SAGE Truck Driving Schools to provide the driver-training program.
SAGE Truck Driving Schools is part of the Camp Hill, Pa.–based SAGE Corporation. SAGE trains more than 4,000 Class A drivers per year, according to the MVCC website.
The program is based upon curriculum that the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) and the Alexandria, Va.–based Professional Truck Driving Institute (PTDI) developed.
PTDI is a nonprofit that has been working with the carriers, truck-driver training schools, insurance industry, and government to prioritize safety, according to its website.
The MVCC driver–training program provides students with a mix of classroom and “hands- on” training, says Armstrong.
This 150-hour program “fully meets the needs” of students with no prior knowledge or experience in truck driving, MVCC contends.
It includes 46 hours of one-student-per-truck driving time and 104 hours of class and lab time.
Upon completion, graduates will be certified as an entry-level tractor-trailer driver in accordance with Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulation 49 CFR 380.503 and passage of the New York state class A commercial driver’s-license requirements.
Applicants are required to have a valid New York driver’s license; be at least 21 years of age; pass a DOT physical and drug test; maintain a “good” driving record; and have a high-school diploma or GED, according to the MVCC website.
The program director will interview applicants. MVCC will also conduct family interviews, because tractor-trailer driving is a “commitment,” says Armstrong.
“Before you put in this kind of time and money, you have to make sure that your whole family is behind you on this,” she says.
Between 100 and 120 people complete the course annually, says Armstrong.
People completing the course can pursue driving jobs with starting salaries of about $40,000, she says. MVCC says it has a 98 percent placement rate for people taking the training course.
Contact Reinhardt at ereinhardt@cnybj.com
CNY Arts receives $40,000 contract through National Endowment for the Arts
SYRACUSE — The National Endowment for the Arts has awarded CNY Arts, Inc. a $40,000 contract through its Art Works grant program. CNY Arts will use the funds to support implementation of Engage CNY, the local organization’s 10-year cultural plan to boost “the livability and economic vitality” of Onondaga, Oswego, Madison, Oneida, Cortland, and Herkimer
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SYRACUSE — The National Endowment for the Arts has awarded CNY Arts, Inc. a $40,000 contract through its Art Works grant program.
CNY Arts will use the funds to support implementation of Engage CNY, the local organization’s 10-year cultural plan to boost “the livability and economic vitality” of Onondaga, Oswego, Madison, Oneida, Cortland, and Herkimer counties, according to a news release.
Art Works grants focus on the creation of work and presentation of both new and existing work; lifelong learning in the arts; and public engagement with the arts through 13 arts disciplines or fields.
Engage CNY will continue its work connecting audiences to artistic offerings through “collaborative marketing” and through “increased integration” with the region’s higher-education institutions.
“It is incredibly gratifying that this process receives support on a national level,” Stephen Butler, executive director of CNY Arts, said. “This project is the culmination of months of work from dozens of people … This award is a great win for the community.”
Several organizations, including the Skaneateles Falls–based Allyn Foundation; the Central New York Community Foundation; Syracuse–based Gifford Foundation; the Syracuse–based John Ben Snow Foundation; DeWitt–based Dorothy and Marshall M. Reisman Foundation; the Trust for Cultural Resources of Onondaga County; Empire State Development Corporation; and the New York State Council on the Arts through the Central New York Regional Economic Development Council, have previously supported Engage CNY, according to CNY Arts.
The offices of New York State Senator Dave Valesky, former New York State Assemblywoman Joan Christensen, and the Syracuse Convention and Visitors Bureau provided initial funding and support for the project.
CNY Arts, which is located on the 11th floor of the John H. Mulroy Civic Center at 421 Montgomery St. in Syracuse, says it works to “promote, support, and celebrate arts and culture in Central New York.”
Faxton St. Luke’s signs lease agreement for location of regional dialysis center
ONEIDA — Faxton St. Luke’s Healthcare (FSLH) has signed a lease agreement to place its regional dialysis center in the Oneida Plaza at 131 Main St. in Oneida. FSLH still needs approval from the New York State Department of Health. It hopes to have construction work on the space completed by next fall, according to
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ONEIDA — Faxton St. Luke’s Healthcare (FSLH) has signed a lease agreement to place its regional dialysis center in the Oneida Plaza at 131 Main St. in Oneida.
FSLH still needs approval from the New York State Department of Health. It hopes to have construction work on the space completed by next fall, according to a news release from FSLH.
The hospital anticipates the new dialysis unit will include 12 treatment stations and operate six days per week from 5 a.m. to 4 p.m.
The FSLH regional dialysis center, which the hospital says is the “sole” provider of dialysis treatment within a 25-mile radius of Utica, has seven locations.
The center treats more than 450 patients and performs more than 70,000 dialysis treatments annually, FSLH said.
Doctors use dialysis in the treatment process if chronic kidney disease progresses to kidney failure, according to the FSLH website.
Faxton St. Luke’s Healthcare is an affiliate of the Mohawk Valley Health System.
CNY Regional Economic Development Council Named a Top Performer
On Dec. 11, Central New York has named a top performer in the state’s competitive Regional Economic Development Council (REDC) process, and awarded $80.2 million for 85 projects that will have a direct impact on our region. By demonstrating a best-in-class track record for leveraging investment, providing a strong return on investment, and successfully completing
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On Dec. 11, Central New York has named a top performer in the state’s competitive Regional Economic Development Council (REDC) process, and awarded $80.2 million for 85 projects that will have a direct impact on our region.
By demonstrating a best-in-class track record for leveraging investment, providing a strong return on investment, and successfully completing projects, the CNY REDC has now received $344.6 million over the past four years, more than any other region.
In the larger, 12-county CenterState region, 173 catalytic projects were awarded a total of more than $116.7 million this round.
While all of these projects will support the ongoing implementation of our long-term growth strategies, two projects stand out for their potential to transform the economies and communities of our region.
The first is the Hotel Syracuse project, which received $3.65 million to support the historic property’s planned $60 million renovation. This investment will not only help restore one of Syracuse’s most iconic properties, but it also advances a keystone project that further accelerates downtown’s ongoing revitalization.
Additionally, the Northeast UAS Airspace Integration Research (NUAIR) Alliance was awarded $4 million to support the installation of state-of-the-art instrumentation for the tracking of unmanned-aircraft systems (UAS) at Griffiss International Airport in Rome. This testing capability is the first of its kind at any UAS test site in the country, making Griffiss a strategic location for the emerging UAS industry. Additionally, this project is one of the first cross-regional projects to receive REDC funding through a joint submission by the Central New York and the Mohawk Valley Regional Economic Development Councils.
I want to thank the members of CNY REDC, particularly my co-chair, Syracuse University Chancellor Kent Syverud and the hundreds of community partners and CenterState CEO members working alongside us to advance this important work. Our success hinges on our entire community working toward a common vision of economic opportunity for all.
Robert M. Simpson is president and CEO of CenterState CEO, the primary economic-development organization for Central New York. This editorial is drawn and edited from the “CEO Focus” email newsletter the organization sent out on Dec. 12.
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