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November 2010 • Vol 6 No 8

University of Rochester’s Hall of Fame Calls Hale’s Name

Tim Hale, SUNY Oswego Athletic Director

Oswego State Director of Athletics Timothy Hale was recently inducted into the University of Rochester Athletic Hall of Fame.

During his 26-year coaching career at Rochester, Hale coached four individual national champions, 58 All-Americans, and guided Rochester to the 1991 NCAA Division III Men’s Cross Country Championship. His cross country teams won 15 New York State championships, including a record 10 straight first place finishes from 1987 to 1996.

His men’s and women’s track and field teams won two New York State titles each. He was honored multiple times as Coach of the Year and served on several high-level NCAA committees.

In 2009, he received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the New York State Collegiate Track Conference for longtime service to the organization. He has also served as the University of Rochester's Associate Director of Athletics from 1998 to 2000.

— Adele Burk



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Oswego Alumni Association, Inc. • King Alumni Hall - SUNY Oswego • Oswego, NY 13126
315-312-2258 • 315-312-5570 (fax) • E-mail:
alumni@oswego.edu • Web site: oswego.edu/alumni

Who doesn’t want to save the world? Michael Kite ’02 does that for a living through World Wildlife Fund.

 

As marketing specialist for one of the world’s leading conservation organizations, Kite and his team of three work to raise more than $5 million each year. The majority of that money comes from licensing partnerships and promotions with the likes of Barnes & Noble, Gap, Hewlett-Packard, Dial and Coinstar.

 

Retail partnerships help WWF spread its message to the general public and raise funds for its conservation work around the globe. For example, Bank of America contributes $100 for every special Visa account opened and Nabisco is supporting WWF’s “Year of the Tiger” initiative with special packaging and a $100,000 donation. The new CVS Green Bag Tag program rewards reusable bag-toting customers, and generates five cents for WWF for each tag sold.

 

All support WWF’s mission of protecting the future of nature, down to the finest details, Kite said.

 

“We like to see that the product is made from recycled material and is recyclable itself, and somehow ties into our mission,” Kite said. The Green Bag Tag, for instance, is made from a corn-based material and features a 100 percent recycled silicone lanyard.

 

As a broadcasting major at Oswego, Kite got involved with WRVO-FM and WNYO-FM.

 

“I think it gave me a lot more confidence in talking to people,” he said. It was an important part of his early career in broadcast sales and remains an important piece in the message he “sells” today.

 

“The best part of my job is seeing a product in the store with the WWF logo after months of working with a company to launch it,” said Kite, who joined the organization in 2006. “It’s rewarding to give people a fun, unique way to protect our planet.”

 

— Shane M. Liebler

 Last Updated: 11/4/10