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The thI acan, 1999-2000 The thI acan: 1990/91 to 1999/2000

3-23-2000 The thI acan, 2000-03-23

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This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the The thI acan: 1990/91 to 1999/2000 at Digital Commons @ IC. It has been accepted for inclusion in The thI acan, 1999-2000 by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ IC. Vol. 67, No. 24 Thursday Ithaca, N.Y. March 23, 2000 32 Pages, Free www.ithaca.edu/ithacan The Newspaper for the Ithaca College Community

News Accent Inside Accent 15 D.C. center to open Poet kicks off series Classified 25 College announces new U.S. Poet Laureate Robert Pinsky Comics 24 Washington program. Page 3 to speak Monday. Page 17 Opinion 12 Sports 27 Symposium promotes scholarship "This is a day students college­ wide from all disciplines can pre­ Annual event sent original research," he said. "This is significant because at col­ showcases leges like Ithaca, undergraduate re­ search is not the norm. To have un­ dergraduate research going on ... is academics an extraordinary thing." Junior Dana Goldfarb's presen­ BY BENJAMIN B. McMILLAN tation was entitled, "Internal Inflic­ .. , Staff Writer tion of Emotional Distress in Di­ vorce Proceedings." She said the ex­ More than 80 students dis­ perience she gained from preparing played their knowledge Monday for the symposium will benefit hc1 through a variety of presentations, graduate studies. including musical and art compo­ "I am planning on going to law sitions, video projects and re­ school and [the symposium} will search studies at the fourth annual help me in compiling research and James J. Whalen Academic Sym­ presenting it, especially to a group posium. that does not have base knowl­ The symposium, which started edge," Goldfarb said. "It was in spring 1997, is a tribute to Pres­ good public speaking practice." ident Emeritus James J. Whalen's Other student presenters also efforts to promote student and said they gained valuable experience. faculty collaboration. Freshman Sean Tully and his This year, students from all partner, junior Amelia O'Hanlon, five of the college's schools pre­ will deliver their presentation, sented work. "Trig of a Square," at Vassar Col­ Associate Provost and Dean of lege on April 8 at the seventh an­ Graduate Studies Garry Brod­ nual Hudson River Undergraduate head, who coordinated the event.­ Mathematics Contest. ALAN DEITCI-VTHE ITHACAN said the symposium is unique be­ "This is a practice run," Tully SENIOR SCOTT WILSON (left) explains a difficult math problem with the help of his sponsor, Associate cause undergraduate student Professor Osman Vurekll, math and.computer science, at the James J. Whalen Symposium Monday. scholarship is publicly presented. See PROFESSORS, page 4 Two students reveal presidential intentions VIC gears up for marathon Celebration of Service event Sachs, Tillapaugh ~ to benefit di,sabled peopk declare candidacy BY ELLEN STAPLETON BY MICHAEL W. BLOOMROSE Staff_Writer ______News Editor ,~~, ------',,~ , Seniors Michael L1cbcm1an and Eric Schoenfeld •. '. Sophomore Andrew Sachs and arc about to expcncncc the longest weekend of their

junior Daniel Tillapaugh have an­

~?itlf>fMtrnational News Due largely to political sensitivities, no pontiff has ven­ The latest flooding compl~ted a picture of devastation in tured into the Holy Land since Pope Paul VI visited in 1964. Moz.ambique, where the North had been the only region of the ORANGEMEN ARE VICTORIOUS Israel is planning its biggest-security operation ever in country spared since rivers began to overflow in early Febru­ preparation for the pope's ·arrival Tuesday evening. ary. 1be government has confinned ~ 492 people died in the The highlight of the entire visit could come on the final floods, but more bodies could befound as flood waters recede. day, Saturday, when the pontiff will work his way through The British military began a phased withdrawal of heli­ the narrow stone lanes of Jerusalem's Old City, stopping at copters Hying aid to hundreds of thousands of-flood victims sites sacred to the three different religions. in southern Mozambique. Four Puma helicopters left John Paul will visit the Western Wall, believed to be the Mozambique Sunday, but Britain plans to continue deliver­ only surviving remnant of the Jewish Second Temple. In a show ing relief using ten other helicopters, said Andrew Bowes, of solidarity with Muslims, he also plans to go to the adjoin­ a spokesman for the British High Commission. ing Haram as-Sharif, site of the Dome of the Rock. Aid agencies hope to secure commercially owned heli­ The pope will conclude his pilgrimage at Christianity's copters and aircraft to deliver food as other foreign militaries holiest site, the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, the spot where scale down their relief operations. Jesus was believed to be crucified, buried and resurrected. A U.S. relief operation is· scheduled to last until April 2. John McCain returns to Senate-chamber SOURCE: Asso.ciated Press John McCain, who joked with campaign audiences that he'd TEEN CONVICTED never win a Miss Congeniality award in the Senate, returned to the Capitol Monday saying he expected "a wann welcome." A smiling McCain was swarmed by reporters as he ap­ proached his Senate office. 'Tm looking forward to having lunch with all my friends tomorrow," McCain said, referring to the GOP luncheon held Tuesdays when the Senate is in session. Indeed, public displays of graciousness arc sure to mark his return as a more formidable political force than when he left. It's the Senate's way, even though he ran a presidential campaign that rocked the Republican establishment and used fellow lawmakers as foils. "Senators arc in conflict every day with each other, in com­ mittee, over issues, m letters, in the media, on the floor," said Paul Coverdell, R-Ga., Senate point man for likely GOP pres­ idential nominee George W. Bush. "But it has a fraternal na­ ture to it and you have to set the battles ... aside." Beyond the displays of senatorial courtesy, the Arizona senator's allies say fellow Republicans will ignore his new JANET WORNE/KNIGHT RIDDER SYRACUSE'S JASON HART (5) is fouled by political clout at their own peril. Kentucky's Saul Smith in the first half of the "There are only two Umted States senators who have a tru­ M.J. AVILA/KNIGHT RIDDER Orangemen's 52-50 victory in the second round of ly national constituency. One's name 1s Ted Kennedy and one's JOSHUA COLE, 19, of Southgate, Mich., was the NCAA Tournament Saturday. The third round name is John McCain,'" said fonner White House chief of staff convicted of Involuntary manslaughter and begins today, with Syracuse playing Michigan State. Ken Duberstein, McCam's friend ,ind senior adviser. mixing a harmful substance March 14. Cole mixed the date- rape drug GHVS into drinks consumed by Mozambique hit by yet more fl.ooding Samantha Reid, 15, and Melanie Sendone, 16. Reid Pope John Paul II visits the Holy Land died and Sendone went into a coma. A northern Mo.rnmhiquc river burst its banks after a week On the lirst papal pilgrimage to the Holy Land m 36 years. of torrential rain, submerging three or four villages and adding an emotional Pope John Paul II Monday called for a reso­ to the woes caused by weeks of floods in this impoverished CORRECTIONS lution of the region's "grave and urgent'" conflicts as he ~outhea!>t African country. began a week-long Journey to retrace the footsteps of Jc~u~. Freshman Donna Fisher was in the sports photo on The flooded Messalo River, m the northern Gabo Delgado page 23 in last week's issue, not junior Kelly Brady. Walking stiffly with the aid of a cane, the 79-ycar-old pon­ province, hlocked the main road 70 miles from the Tanzanian t1 ff traveled directly from Amman's airport to wind-swept border, said Antonio Machcvc, a spokesman for the coun­ Mount Nebo, where tradition say!> Moses fir~! glimpsed the try's natwnal disaster management agency. Professor Patty Zirnmermann's name was mis­ promised land. The hilltop is holy to Chnstiam,, Jews and Several villages along the banks of the Zambezi River in spelled in "Park produces seven published profes­ Mu~lim~. and was a fitting first stop for a pope scekmg to the Tete province had also been flooded, while the towns of sors" in last week's issue repair the historical tension hetwecn the three religions. YJ!anculo and Inha~soro in the central Inhambane province had The lrip through Jordan, hracl and the Palestinian been cut off because access roads were under water, he said. It is The lthacan's policy to correct all errors of fact. territories was horn out of the pope's dc~ire to sec Chri~ten­ Light rain continue~ to fall, and the South African Weath­ Please contact Assistant News Editor Jennifer dom \ holiest slle\ in thi~ year, though the mis~ion camcs broad­ er Bureau forecast more showers over Mozambique before Hodess at 274-3207. er rcligiou\ and political meaning in this volatile region. the weather is expected to clear later this week. THURSLJAY, MARCH 23, 2000 THE I fl-fACAN 3 Washington center official pie at any one time. Th,~ new pro­ Plans disclosed gram should get the politics dc­ Mayor Cohen to discuss panmcnt back where 11 should be." Southwest Development Spalatin could not speak about for internships, any specific housmg accommoda­ Mayor Alan Cohen will visit the tions. He said the college 1s con­ college on March 30 at 8 p.m. in housing options sidering sub-lcasmg apartment Textor 103 to discuss the Southwest space from Boston University, Development issue. BY JASON SUBIK but an agreement has not heen fi­ Cohen will be joined by repre­ Staff Writer nahlcd sentatives of the Citizen's Planning Spalat111 estimated the cost at Alliance, who will present their side Beginning next fall, a multi-dis­ about $4,800 for room and board, of the divisive issue. cipline internship program in whether students live 111 a dorm­ Each side have about 20 minutes Washington will be offered for hkc !-,ettmg or mdcpendently rn an to speak and will answer questions Ithaca College juniors and seniors. apartment. at the end of the program. Students can cam up to 15 cred­ Senior Lloyd Goldberg, the stu­ The event, sponsored by the Stu­ its while working in the nation's dent representative to the politics de­ dent Government Association, capital at one of many internship panmcnt, said he like;, what he has follows a decision by that organi­ sites, including congressional of­ heard ahout the program. zation to condemn the project. fices, the White House or one of ··rt sounds like a great idea," he more than 3,000 non-governmen­ ;,aid. "For people interested in get­ Speaker to examine tal organizations. ROBERTS. BLUEY/THE ITHACAN ting good internships. especially in Applications, which are due on BECOMING A WHITE HOUSE intern is a possibility with the col­ bio.technology issues lege's new Semester Program in Washington, announced this week. politics, there will be a lot more op­ April 6, arc available in the portunities in Washington than 1f Kristin Dawkins, a program provost's office in Job Hall. found out that Ithaca College was sites around the city. they were takmg 15 credits and try­ director at the Institute of Agricul­ Ithaca College entered into a looking for the right ingredients to "We will go on field tnps to ing to get [a poht1cs internship! 111 ture and Trade Policy, will speak on joint agreement with Butler Uni­ make it happen, so I helped places hkc the CIA, Smnhsonian Ithaca." "Agricultural Biotechnofogy: versity on the project. The program them," Spalatin said. museums, Pentagon and the Li­ The program will be available Battle Royal of the 21st Century" will host IO to 15 students in the The "right ingredients" 111- brary of Congress," he said. to juniors and senior;, with a today at 7:30 p.m, in Textor l02. beginning, but Butler University cludc the credit system of the new Associate Professor Marty minimum 2.75 GPA. Her lecture will focus on the Program Director lvo Spalatin program - students will receive Brown~tcin, pol it1cs, commented Spalatin advised ~tudcnt:, m­ patenting of genes. cnvisio!]s it could expand to 30 stu­ six credits for their internship and on the new program. tcrc~tcd in the program for the fall Dawkins is this year's speaker dents in a few years. three credits each for an indepen­ "This isn't a new idea, the pol­ to '"double register" or register for for the C.P. Snow Lecture Series at Spalatin, who has 30 years of dent study and courses on mtcr­ itics department had a summer 111- classes as though they will he tak­ the college. experience in Washington as a se­ national affairs, the federal gov­ ternship program that Wa\ very ex­ mg classe~ at Ithaca 1n ca~c they The C.P. Snow Lecture Series nior policymaker in Congress ernment and the political process. citing startmg 111 the early 1970s do not get 111to the program. has hccn held at the college since and the State Department, spoke to "Classes will be held Monday right up to the 1980s," he said TI1e program will beg111 \\ 1th an 1965, bringing speakers to campus several classes this week about the through Thursday from 6:30 to 8 ··smcc then. individuals have had orientation on Aug 26 and end~ who actively combine scientific and Semester Program in Washing'ton. p.m. after students get back from 111tcrnships 111 Washmgton, hut with final exam, on Dec. 14. The humanistic perspectives. "I ran into your Provost [Jim their internships," Spalatin s,ud. we· vc never had a ~lluat1on ~rn ng ,cmc\lcr start~ on Jan 19 Dawkins is a plant biologist who Malek] in Washington and I On Fridays, students will nsit where we ~ent more than IO peo- and runs through May I 0 is concerned with food security, en­ vironmental policy and corporate control of food plant genes. Annual Ed _Tech Day is on the way Registrar presents vices for computers and telcv1s1on~ an ACCS employee who attended gani,.ation~. from middle ;,chollh electronic registration Vendors to display and breakthrough products for in­ last year's Ed Tech Day, said stu­ to college~ to local bu~me;,;,e,. hav1: . - . Registrar John Stanton spoke to latest technologies put technology for people with dents should take the opportunlly registered to attend. Student Congress Tuesday night physical disabilities. to interact with the up-and-coming When the first Ed Tech Day w,t, about the new onlinc registration at campus event The companies will also be products because technology is held in 1991, five technology ven­ system. conducting seminars in such a big part of dors came and only member~ of the Stanton told the representa­ BY ELLEN STAPLETON Clark Lounge, Klin­ everyday Ii fc. Ithaca College community coulJ at­ tives that each student will receive Staff Wnrcr ______gcnstcm Lounge and ''Dell and Apple tend. a registration access code number the North and South arc the two big compa­ Weil hegan organ1nng Ed that will be automatically activat­ National and local technology Meeting Rooms every nies that come · and Tech Day after attending a nation­ ed at a certain day and time, al­ vendors will showcase their latest hour. Weil said some of they bring all the stuff al technology conference. lowing students to begin the onlinc products at Educational Technol­ the seminars will be that is coming out in the "I wa!-> thmking about the con­ registration process. ogy Day tod~y in the Campus Cen­ very technical, but oth­ next year," she said. ference .. and how I wished that RAC numbers will be available ter. ers will discuss practical ACCS Director other people at Ithaca College from advisers. The activation order The annual event, which attrncts subjects, such as Web Michael Taves said Ed would have the opportunity to sec will be determined by the Academic an audience from the higher edu­ design. Tech Day 1s a wonder­ where the computer industry ,~ Dean's Committee, Stanton said. cation and business community Weil said Ed Tech WEIL ful service to the region headmg. experiment with new To register on-line, students across upstate New York, is Day is a good opportu- "An event like thr~ technologies and get a chance to will need Degree Navigator. Stu­ marking its 10th anniversary. nity for students to talk with builds 1b reputation and sigmfi­ talk wnh people from the comput­ dents will no longer use bubble David Weil, assistant director of leaders in the technology field. cance to the region over time."· er companic~ ... he said sheets for adding and dropping Academic Computing and Client "[The vendors I have lots of Taves said. Some major vendor;, attending classes and open registration will Services, said vendors will focus ideas and insight into where the in­ Weil said the event has grown the show will include Adohe Sy,­ be eliminated. on the latest wirclc~s technology, dustry is heading and what people mto a major technology show, with tcrm, Canon USA, Compa4. Or­ A visual demonstration of the as well as new alternative~ can expect when they graduate. a record number of vendors this year. acle Corporation. Bell Atlantic. online registration process has among Internet service providers. maybe even make some Joh con­ He also ~aid pre-registration has Clanty Connect, I-dnvc com. A hccn scheduled for April 11 at 7:30 He also said several vendors tacts," he said. increased about 30 to 40 percent chance to wm an iMac cnmputer p.m. in Textor 103. will present compact display de- Sophomore Andrea All111gton, from previous years. About 130 or- will also be offered.

Casual, Qu..ali-t;y Di.ni::n.g STIIE 11111: BIG Monday-Thursday: 6 a.m. to midnight AL'S ::Ea.,s-t 8:i_de Friday and Saturday: 6 a.m. to 1 a.m. Sunday: 8 a.m. to midnight I&es-tin,-..:rn,ra_-fi •· ... the most exciting menu!" FREE IEUIEIY: Italian Greek and /-lomemade Special,\, Fresh 5,eafood Monday-Thursday: 11 a.m. to midnight Friday: 11 a.m. to 1 a.m. ''... a ~op choice res~au.ra:n.~. .. " Saturday: noon to 1 a.m. Ithaca Journal Restaurant Review, Jan. 6, 2000 Sunday: noon to midnight Onlv on Sundays 8 a.m.-2 p.m. Full Breakfa~l Menu HELP WANTED-DRIVERS NEEDED Including the famous "louks"small dough halls. soli inside and 272-3448 $10-12/hour crispy on the outside. made with light null)' hatter. deep fried to a Clip and Save 1103 Danby Road golden hrown. served hot and topped with honeysyrup. walnuts and cinnamon!!! 1.l!nm .l!inw:r Mon • Sal 11 a 111 - 4 p m ~ Mon • S,11 -I - IO p m StudvBreak ,, I SwlJlw Full Brcakfasl Menu 8 am - 1 pm Dmncr Noon· 5 pm You must mention ad when ordering and present rt upon purchase I • ,&~~ : East Hill Plaza Tax included Expires Mar. 29, 2000 Not valid with any other otter ~ I major credit cards accepted Reservations (607) 256-3000 L------JI 4 THl ITHACAN THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 2000 Professors and students collaborate on work Carl Sgrccci, vice president and treasur­ Lounge as part of the symposium. Brodhead said he is happy with the out­ Continued from page 1 er, said one of the presentations he saw was Senior Michael Clisham showed three come of this year's symposium, calling it an said. 'Today's presentation will help us see not only personally interesting to him, but works of art: two intaglios and an embossing. "unqualified success." how we do with an audience and how we can would benefit him as a member of "The work I presented represents my de­ "The level of the presentations was ex­ make [the presentation] better next time." Longvicw's board of directors. velopment of techniques in intaglio printing," cellent," he said. "Some represented work Associate Professor Osman Yurekli, Senior Bryan Rourke and juniors Nick Kline he said. would be considered very good even at the mathematics and computer science, sponsored and Melissa McClure presented "A Survey of Clisham explained that intaglio printing graduate level." Tully. He said the symposium was worthwhile Longview Residents: Satisfaction/Dissatis­ is the art of carving an image onto a metal Senior Scott Hepburn, a presenter at the because it took him and his student'> into a non­ faction with Services and Ithaca College." plate, which can then be reprinted. symposium, agreed with Brodh~ad, but traditional academic setting. "I had an interest in how the residents were Seniors Peter Hewitt Linley and thought that the event could be improved. "We generally teach classes," Yurekli said. reacting to the new facility," Sgrecci said. "It Michael McGrath also exhibited their artwork "It is a relatively young program," Hep­ "[The symposium] is a way to connect with gave me some insight to where we might make at the symposium: a selection of oil and burn said. "However, I think more students the students at a different level. They become improvements if we ever had the opportuni­ acrylic paintings. should stop in and see what their classmates more than my students. They become my col­ ty to design a facility like [Longview) again." The event received positive feedback arc doing. Students on this campus do some laborators." An art exhibit was displayed in Clark from the more than 300 people who attended. incredible work." Student disc jockeys aim to raise $3,000

Continued from page 1 mcnt stuff to keep us going and hopefully a lot of people will Ablezer said the live broadcasts show up at the remotes to cheer us are a great way to meet people and on and help us stay awake." collect funds. "The primary reason for During its 14-year span, the doing [remotes) is so that people can marathon has raised more tlr.ln see who we are and so that we can $20,000 total for organi1..ations say, 'Hey, we are trying to help this such as AIDSWork of Tompkins chanty, we could use your help."' County, and the Southside Com­ In addition to being broadcast on munity Center. cable and the Internet at I 05.9 FM, Manager of Radio Operations 92 WICB and ICTV 16 will simul­ Christopher Wheatley said the station cast much of the marathon. would be ecstatic to raise a total of Ablezer said ICIV will have a $3,000. He said they will raise at least live camera m the studio for most of $2,000, with 50 sponsors paying $40 the marathon. "You will be able to each for an hour of the marathon. see the DJs on the air, in addition to The marathon raised $2, I 06 hearing them on your radio," he said. for the Task Force for Battered Lieberman and Schoenfeld, Women last year. In 1998, the who are known as "Leebo" and "Ed marathon collected a record Daniels" on the air, will be supported $2,800 for the Ithaca Youth Bureau by the street team of sophomores One on One Program. Jesse Kaplan and John Langeler. FLIC is one of 35 centers for in­ Both Lieberman and Schoenfeld dependent living in New York said they have not been doing any­ state. Program Director Larry thing to physically prepare for the Roberts said he is pleased the ra­ marathon. dio station has decided to raise "I do not think there is anything funds for the center. you can really do to prepare your­ "We certainly are grateful lo self to torment your body and stay VIC for choosing us this year and up for 50 hours," Schoenfeld said. we certainly have need for this kind "There will be a lot of entertain- of community support," he said. Cam.pus investigations turn up minimal leads BY JASON SUBIK tographs or a live line-up. Staff Writer - · · ·The woman, who has returned to campus, said Campus Safety did ask Little progress has been made in her to examine some photographs, the Campus Safety investigation of but she was unable to the alleged Feb. 17 attack of a 19- single out her alleged assailant. MICHAB. W. BLOOMROSE/THE llliACAtf year-old freshman female or of the "I went down to Campus Safe­ PRESIDENT PEGGY WIWAMS (rear, center} dlscuaaes cleaning up South HIii with Asaoclate alleged Oct. 27 assault of another ty Friday because police said they Professor Dani Novak (left), math and computer science, and Sharon Runge, former executive female freshman in campus park­ had a lead," she said. "I looked at assistant to the president, while an unidentified student collects trash on last year's Day of Service. ing lot "L." six photos and was asked to iden­ At the time of the latest on-cam­ tify the attacker from photos and pus attack, a woman, an 11th floor none of the six people were the at­ resident of the West Tower, reported tacker." Service to be celebrated a white male in his mid-20s with There are also few new leads in a large build and dark brown hair the investigation into October's al­ BY MICHAEL W. BLOOMROSE ty Council, mural painting at about other projects going on. followed her into her dorm room leged assault. Officials said, the al­ News Editor South Hill Elementary School co­ An involvement fair, spon­ and pushed her to the floor before leged attack on a woman in lot "L" sponsored by Student Govern­ sored by the Ithaca College she forced him to leave. Investi­ is still being treated as an assault be­ Are you ready for some ment Association, Hoops for Community Alumni; is also gators have been unable to locate cause the alleged victim reported it service? Hunger coordinated by the scheduled for Friday. an individual matching this de­ as an assault. The Celebration of Service School of Health Sciences and The fair will run from 9 a.m. scription. However, investigators have kicks off tonight with an Itha­ Human Performance, and odd to 3 p.m. in Egbert Hall lobby and Campus Safety has, however, still not received the results of sci­ cappella concert in the Pub/Cof­ jobs at the Ithaca Community North Foyer, Phillips Hall. been contacted by six students entific tests that could confirm the feehouse from 8 to 10 p.m. The Childcare Center by the Physical The celebration is also under­ claiming to have seen a man nature of the assault, Durling said. celebration will run all-day Fri­ Therapy Club. way at the college's London resembling the composite sketch re­ 'The case has always been and day. Last year, more than 500 vol­ Center and L.A. program. leased as part of the Feb. 29 Cam­ probably always will be treated as The event, which began with unteers participated by holding Students in Los Angeles are pus Safety Alert, Campus Safety In­ an assault," she said. "It could pos­ President Peggy Williams' inau­ food and toy drives, cleaning up participating in Project Angel vestigator Laura Durling said. sibly change if the results of the sci­ guration in March 1998, was re­ trash and raking leaves on South Food, while the London stu­ "In each of those incidents, entific tests indicate otherwise." named earlier this year in order Hill, providing musical enter­ dents are participating in a com­ Campus Safety sends officers to try Durling anticipated that Campus to emphasize the fact that service tainment for the elderly, and munity service auction. to identify the person that the stu­ Safety will eventually receive the to the community lasts more doing various collections for President Williams has invit­ dent reports," she said. "In each of test results. than one day. community agencies. ed the entire campus communi­ those incidents that we were able to "We still don't have them be­ As of yesterday, 63 activities The committee's information ty to an all-campus reception identify the person, it was a differ­ cause it can take a very lengthy pe­ had been officially scheduled table will be set up in Egbert Hall Friday from 4 to 5:30 p.m. in the ent person each time." riod for the State Police to analyze with the Celebration of Service lobby through 2 p.m. today. Pub/Coffeehouse. Williams will Durling declined to comment on them," she said. Committee. Community members are en­ be recognizing the college com­ whether or not the alleged victim Campus Safety would like any­ Those events include a book couraged to register their service munity's commitment to service had been asked to identify her one with any information about ei­ drive being organized by Facul- projects or get information to close the day. alleged attacker through pho- ther investigation to contact them. IHURSDAY, MARCH 23, 2000 THE ITHACAN 5 Class sparks high school discussions College students teach youths about diversity BY CARLA KUCINSKI Staff Writer

Students teaching students. This is the focus of a new pro­ gram designed by Ithaca College in coordination with Ithaca High School. Concentrating on college antj high school students teaching each other how to better understand people's differences, the program was designed to promote greater racial, class, ethnicity and sexual orientation understanding within Ithaca's youths. "We figured high school stu­ dents would respect and listen to college students," Professor Elaine Leeder, sociology, said. "It is a way for people of close age to educate and grow together." The college students lead focus groups of high school students and discuss selected topics, such as in­ JEN BLANCO/THE ITHACAN equality or racism in popular cul­ SOPHOMORES ALICIA BERGER, Katie Lenz and senior Marla Enowitz (from left) discuss how they can be peer leaders to high school ture, at weekly Thursday afternoon youths. The students will go to Ithaca High School today as part of the Social Policy class taught by Professor Elaine Leeder, sociology. meetings. cern them and also concern their "We want student'> to understand terms used for blacks or Jews. talk about issues and concerns The group facilitators are 30 stu­ communities and peers." that they're growing in a global so­ "I think kids got to talk about close to them." dents from Leeder's Social Policy Bryan Nance, assistant to the di­ ciety," she said. "We want the stu­ things they don't normally talk Ithaca College students in­ class. Prior to the series of meetings, rector of admissions, said that he dents to feel accepted." about," he said. "We talked about volved in the discussion groups said Leeder provided exercises to train thinks the project is a good way to Powell said their goal for their stereotypes and we talked about they enjoy leading these student talks the student facilitators. Her sociol­ get college students involved in the students is that they will find solu­ things that I know I never talked while, at the same time, learning ogy class also discussed its ideas for local community. tions to solve their problems. about in high school." something from the Ithaca High running and moderating the student Nance, who initially came up The first of four group sessions Integration of high school and School students themselves. discussion groups. with the idea for the program, was March I6. The groups discussed college students is a key clement of "I really like the fact that we arc Junior Sara Menkin, one of the thought it should be a volunteer pro­ the nature of prejudice, discrimina­ the project to facilitate conversations put into the position of acting as student facilitators, said the project gram, but later changed his mind. tion and stereotypes. between people of different ages, mentors for the kids," junior Angela makes a significant impact by ex­ "We wanted to make sure stu­ 'They saw how these things get Nance said. He also said he hopes Demo said . posing high school students to dents here got more out of it than into popular culture," Leeder said, .the project motivates the high Depending on feedback through ideas they might not have considered community service," he said. "and how they limit perception." school students to discuss ideas that evaluations and surveys lo be dis­ bur that might impact them anyway. Madelii;ie Powell, assistant to the Junior Andrew Hosmer said the are important to them. tributed lo Ithaca High School stu­ ··"1 think this type of program is principal of minority affairs at first meeting allowed high school "I hope it encourages people at dents after the sessions, the project important because it raises con­ Ithaca High School, said the pro­ students to talk about subjects they the high school level to talk about may continue in the future. sciousness," she said. "It makes stu­ gram was a good way for students might not nonnally discuss. For in­ things they usually don't," he Nance said he hopes the project dents more aware of things that con- to talk about diversity. stance, the groups discussed slang said, "and to get those students to turns into a year-round event. ,- Itf not just a job. ·Its a dhance to make a difference.

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Exp/ore your future with Hillside To find out more about a career at Hillside Chilllren'e, Cenler, apply in person or semi your resume lo: For Residential Service positions For In-I lome Service positions Staffing Managers I luman l~csource~ Hillside Cl1Jdrcn' s Cenler Hillside Chilllren'::, ( cnler 1183 Monroe Avenue Tel (716) 654-+535 Hillside Rochester, NY 14620 Fax (716) 654-4550 Bwldmg better futures with children and families Tel (716) 256-7586 n-y (716) 654-4510 ·1 Fax: (716) 256-7555 Joh l lotline (716) 654--J..373 www.hJlside.com f, ff ------·-·-~---·~--~-~-·-- -~-----Q-···----··---~~---. 6 THE ITHACAN THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 2000 Author interprets menstruation BY JULIE COCHRAN cussion. Staff Writer ______She was among the first women to be ordained when she In India, the friends and ex­ was studying at seminary, Winter tended family of a young Hindu said. woman gather to give her gifts and Traditionally, the Christian to bless her with flowers when she trinity of Father, Son and Holy first menstruates as part of the Ghost are perceived as three male Menarche ritual, said Judy Grahn, figures, Winter said. the third speaker in the Writing Pro­ However, if you look at the ear­ g~1m 's Distinguished Writers Se­ ly texts of Genesis, God's name is ries. Western culture teaches a plural which could be either male women to hide their menstruation, or female, she said. but this is not the case in other cul­ "Men and women were created tures, she said. in the image of God," Winter said. Grahn participated in a panel dis­ Winter also mentioned that Je­ cussion on "Women's Rituals" sus was an advocate of women and Tuesday with the Rev. Eileen that there are a variety of Biblical Winter, the Protestant chaplain, parables about women. Deborah Jones, a local artist, and "People are now starting to Assistant Professor Barbara John­ look into this forgotten text," she son, anthropology. said. Early in the discussion, Grahn In the last panel presentation, used a personal experience to il­ Jones showed the audience a series lustrate Western ideas about men­ of slides of the self-portrait wood struation. She said that when she carving she created, "The God­ was a teen-ager, she once ripped dess." quarter-size holes in the sheets of She explained that the portrait a bed she menstruated in, so that no made of wood and shells resembles BARBARA LAUZIERffHE ITHACAN her qualities, and not physical one would know what happened, AUTHOR JUDY GRAHN (left), Assistant Professor Barbara Johnson (center}, anthropology, and Lindy she said. likeness, she said. Cummings speak after a panel discussion Tuesday. Grahn, the author of 13 books, will hold a poetry Jones also showed slides of "Menstruation was something to reading at 7:30 p.m in Muller Chapel. The event is free and open to th~ public. be ashamed of," she said. masks she has created that represent In her studies of the Hindu cul­ fiction and poetry books. Her women and include biblical narra­ alone," Johnson said. human emotions that people usually ture in India, Grahn found the men­ book, "Blood, Bread, and Roses," tives, stories about women in the Since Johnson began her re- hide from. struation tradition was quite di~­ is about Menarche rituals. Bible, historical songs and devo­ search in the I 970s, many of these .., Jones created a worship circle in­ ferent. Johnson added to the discussion tional songs, Johnson said. Indian Jews have moved to Israel, eluding the masks on her family The Menarche ritual is important of women's rituals in India by talk­ "Some of them aren't exactly and the songs are at risk of being property five miles out of Ithaca, and even a family of little means ing about the practices of a small from the Bible," she said. "Have lost, she said. she said. will do all they can to throw a big group of Indian Jews. you ever heard the story about Go­ Johnson said she is currently in The panel concluded by taking party for the young woman, She is doing research on these liath 'smother?" the process of translating the songs questions from the audience about Grahn said. women's songs, which are written According to the song, she into English and publishing them. their daily spiritual practices. Grahn is considered the in the vernacular instead of Hebrew, throws a spinning wheel at David Winter spoke of the changing They all discussed the importance founder of "lesbian feminism" she said. while he is out riding his horse. The role of women in the Christian of prayer, working out, cooking and and is the author of 13 fiction, non- The songs are sung only by the moral is: "Don't go out riding church during her part of the dis- art in their spiritual lives.

,:...... ~f I • /' • r .. . I ' 1 I' /~ ,,__.,/ I

James J. Mapes

Hypnosis ... The.ultimate mind trip THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 2000 THE ITHACAN 7 Live from Hollywood: career advice

BY MATT DICKINSON -Slaff Writer

"When someone says, 'keep in touch,' do it!" said alumnus Bill Froehlich '74, a Hollywood pro­ ducer, director and writer for both television and film. Froehlich, who spoke Tuesday night in the Park Auditorium a~ part of the Skip Landen Professional-in­ Residence Series, gave this advice to students trying to break into the film and television industry. A sum ma cum laude graduate of Ithaca College with a bachelor's de­ gree in television-radio, he also gave advice for starting and maintaining careers in the Hollywood television or film industries by using anecdotes from his own experiences. Dean Thomas W. Bohn of the Roy H. Park School of Communi­ cations introduced the former stu­ dent by emphasizing his insight into Hollywood. "Bill Froehlich is and always was a thoughtful voice in an often thoughtless town," Bohn said. Froehlich said he began his ca­ reer with an entry-level job in the Universal Studios mailroom, which he obtained t~ugh a con­ nection at the colleg~Universal, he met such directors l).S Alfred Hitchcock and Steven Spielberg as CATHERINE ESTES/THE ITHACAN well as actors Burt Lancaster and SENIOR GLENN FIELDS (left) talks with Bill Froehlich '74 Tuesday night after Froehlich's speech as part of the Skip Landon Professional­ Anthony Hopkins. in-Resldence Series. Froehlich has spent his career producing, directing and writing for television and films in Hollywood. His next job, and first production 'ident, for two years before being of­ Students should regularly read "Nobody got into the business more failures than successes. position, was for the independent fered the job. trade papers, as well as joining without a hand-up," Froehlich "Look at it as a moment on your film "Olly Olly Oxen Free," starring Froehlich has also written 13 groups and taking classes in order said, "without some kind of help." journey," he said. Katherine Hepburn. He included television movies and produced I 0 to meet new people in the industry, He stressed that recent graduates "It's very useful to hear about clips from this film in his speech. television series. He made his mo­ he said. should have confidence in their abil­ L.A .. because I plan to go there in Throughout his speech, Froehlich tion picture dircctoral debut with the He also said when entering the ities. two months when I graduate," Se­ stressed the importance of connec­ comedy/horror spoof, "Return to job market, it is helpful to make "You need to have a sense of nior Aaron Zober said after the pre­ cions in lhe entertainment induscry. Horror High." He is also a member business cards and have several confidence, and be able to present sentation. He illustrated this point when he of the Directors Guild of America, types of resumes for different it," he said. "A lot of people have While he was here this week, spoke about his next job, where he Writers Guild of America and types of jobs in order to prove you ajob because they know people, but Froehlich also visited classes and spent _two years as a production and Screen Actors Guild. are serious. they don't have a lot of confidence taught master class workshops on development executive at ·(Mary Besides telling anecdotes from Another important trait he in their work." how to direct independent feature Tyler Moore) Enterprises. his own career, Froehlich also mentioned was the confidence to He advised students not to be films, writing successful screen­ Froehlich said he kept in touch with gave advice for students entering en­ make cold calls to people asking for afraid of failure. He said everyone plays, and the production of one­ Granc Tinker, the company's pres- tertainment careers. advice or jobs. in the entertainment industry has hour television dramas. 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BY JULIE COCHRAN He said he is concerned about Staff Wrira ______legislative action to cut funding to programs for the elderly, bur re­ "In a poll within the past two mains optimistic that programs years, more young people believe will eventually expand again, m UFOs than thar Social Security Benson said. will be there for them when they He quoted Winston Churchill on need it," Bill Benson said in a the matter: "You can depend on March 16 speech. America to do the right thing, Benson, founder of the Benson after they have tried everything Consulting Group and former act­ else." ing head of the Administration on Benson is optimistic that federal Aging in the U.S. Department of programs aiding the elderly will be Health and Human Services, was expanded because the number of the latest Distinguished Visiting elderly Americans will multiply Speaker sponsored by the Geron­ considerably in the future, he tology Institute. said. His speech was entitled, "Pub­ By the year 2030, one out of lic Policy and Aging in the New every four or five Americans will Century: Do We Sec the Greatest be elderly, Benson said. Challenges That Lie Ahead?" "An important point he raised Benson explained that al­ was how we would provide long­ JU~HRAN/THE ITHACAN BILL BENSON, former acting head of the Administration on Aging In the U.S. Department of Health and though the United States is thriving term care for such a large popula­ Human Services spoke March 16 as the latest Gerontology Institute Distinguished Speake·r. economically, there is still much to tion of older people," said Pamela be done before Americans can say Mayberry, assistant director of the that if she has a daughter, when she with a growing older population," chance. We need to sec this older it is "as good as ii gets" for the Gerontology Institute. is 15, she won't be able to find a Professor and Director John population as something absolute­ country's elderly. Benson said the growing popu­ radio station she wants to listen to Krout, Gerontology Institute said. ly desirable." "Today, older people pay more lation will allow the elderly to because they will all have music We need to look at the older pop­ The Gerontology Institute will out of pocket for health care with exert great pressure on Congress for that old people like to listen to," ulation as a great resource, he said. sponsor its final distinguished Medicare than they did before we legislation. It will also effect the Benson said. "Older people are a large speaker, Jean K. Quam, on had ir," Benson said. "Imagine how everyday lives of all Americans, he "One important insight he left us source of volunteers," he said. April 12. The title of her speech is much that would be today if we said. with is ... what it will be like for "They really show what they are "Old and Gay: What Will The Fu­ didn't have Medicare." "I told my 15-year-old daughter younger people living in a society capable of doing when given a ture Bring?" DOES TAP MONEY HELP YOU PAY FOR TUITION?

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ANY QUESTIONS? CALL 274-3377

• ,.J ,l l ..,-,, r • THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 2000 THE ITHACAN 9

Select Campus Safety Log Incidents March3-13,2000

March3 conduct incident March 2 also indicated a be present to deter any further contact. flatbed cart. • Unlawful possession/marijuana possible trespassing incident. Patrol Officer Patrol Officer John Federation. Location: Holmes Hall Bruce Holmstock. • Conduct code violation Summary: Suspicious odor of marijuana March 6 Location: Terrace 11 coming from a residence hall room. One • Fire alarms • Property Summary: Fire alarm investigation showed student to be referred judicially for Location: Holmes Hall Location: Park Communications building, that fire sprinkler system had been marijuana. Patrol Officer Fred Thomas. Summary: Fire alarm due to an activated south side of building tampered with by two students. Both were smoke detector outside room. Alarm Summary: Spare car key found on ground referred judicially. • Harassment caused by a frisbee that struck the outside building. Location: Garden Apartment 26 detector. No smoke/no fire. IFD advised March 10 Summary: Caller reported an intoxicated and system reset. One student referred • Fire alarms person who was refusing to leave a judicially. March 7 Location: Terrace 9 residence hall room. Nonstudent arrested • Unlawful possession/marijuana Summary: Fire alarm activation caused by for harassment and arraigned at Ithaca March4 Location: Hilliard Hall dust from custodians cleaning in the area. Town Court. • Conduct code violation Summary: Paraphernalia found in a Panel was reset per IFD. Life Safety Location: Terrace 2 residence hall room. Residents to be Inspector Ronald Clark. • Follow-up Summary: Officer reported bottles being referred judicially for possession of items. Location: Garden Apartment Road thrown from balcony of a residence hall. Sgt. Steve Yaple. •MVA Summary: Caller reported seeing a person Two students charged judicially for location: Emerson Hall resembling the composite on the campus responsibility of guest. Report taken. • Conduct code violation Summary: Vehicle drove into side of alert of Feb. 27 walking up Garden Security Officer Donald Lyke. Location: Holmes Hall building causing damage to vehicle. No Apartment Road. Area checked and no one Summary: An activated fire alarm was injuries reported. Patrol Officer Kevin located. Patrol Officer Fred Thomas. • Property determined to be in violation of the Ithaca Cowen. Location: L-lot College student conduct code. Incident . • Assist other agency Summary: Found driver's side mirror occurred Mar. 3 when a frisbee struck the March 13 Location: All other believed to be associated with a previous detector. • Property Summary: Student reported an off-campus case of criminal mischief Feb. 27. Item Location: Unknown sexual assault, which occurred Feb. 27. secured as found property. Dispatch March 8 Summary: New York State license plate TCSD notified. Investigator Laura Durling. unable to contact owner. • Animal complaint found by employee. Location: Outside Hill Center • Criminal mischief March5 Summary: Report of a sick raccoon near Location: Lower practice fields, Allen Field •MVA academic building. Patrol Officer R. Dirk To view the complete Campus Safety Summary: Caller reported unknown Location: G-lot Hightchew. Log, log on to www.lthaca.edu/ithacan. person(s) caused damage to field by Summary: Caller reported damage to driving a vehicle through it. Damage vehicle. Damage caused by an unknown March 9 Key occurred sometime March 2, Patrol Officer vehicle while vehicle was parked. Report • Suspicious circumstance John Federation. taken. Patrol Officer Erik Merlin. Location: Job administration, E-lot ABC -Alcohol Beverage Control law Summary: Caller reported being followed CMG - • Property DWI - Driving While Intoxicated • Suspicious circumstance by a suspicious vehicle from home ICCS - Ithaca College Campus Safety Location: S-lot Location: All other residence onto campus. Caller requested IFD - Ithaca Fire Department Summary: Found Florida license plate in Summary: Caller reported a visiting escort home (vehicle to follow). Request IPD - Ithaca Police Department parking lot. basketball team had a suspicious male granted. MVA- motor vehicle accident expose himself to several female players at RA - resident assistant TCSD - Tompkins County Sheriff's •Trespass an off-campus location. The visiting team • Larceny value - $200 Department Location: Tallcott Hall, first floor players believed this male would attend the Location: Landon Hall, custodial closet V& T - vehicle and traffic violation Summary: The investigation of a disorderly game on campus and requested an officer Summary: Complainant reported larceny of ews? Call News Editors Michael W. Bloomrose and Jennifer Hodess at 274-3207. 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President's Host Committee and Fall 2000 Summer Assistant Applications ADVANCE REGISTRATION Are now being accepted! BUBBLE SHEET TURN-IN: Introduce prospective students and their families to Ithaca College March 27 - Aprll 6 by

Leading campus tours, participating in Admission programs and serving as a representative of Ithaca College. Make a difference. Get involved! • See Your Advisor ~ Applications are available in the Admissions Office • Choose Your Courses & 100:Job Hall and are due no later than Alternatlves April 1, 2000. • Tarn In Signed Sheet Dates of e~ployment for Summer Assistant positions are _ May 8 through Aug. 26, 2000. Membership on the President's Host Committee begins in August 2000. Questions? Call 274-3124. Good Luck!·~

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Whether or not you've heard her speak, her role as a regular on Oprah makes her an automatic hit. But for a moment, put aside the image of the Editor In Chief Arthur Fonzarelli, the 1970s television stud, and you Robert 8. Bluey will find Winkler, a graduate of Yale University, who · went on to star in several Broadway musicals before Mmaging Editor launching his award-winning acting career. Letters Melissa L. Winkler has done more in recent years than Bloomrose people seem to give him credit for. Sure, he's acted in "Scream" and "The Waterboy," but he has also News Editor dedicated much of his time to humanitarian causes. MichaelW. Either the norm (central point of a In fact, he's focused on family issues such as Choosing 'The Fonz' curve) or the grade for meeting criteria can Bloomrose adoption, divorce, teen drinking and childhood is a disappointment be raised or lowered. Your editorial is death. He's also dedicated himself to helping correct that many factors may be involved. Asst. News Editor handicapped and special-needs children, for which When I first heard that Henry Winkler, I'm merely pointing out that an Jennifer Hodess he was awarded a U.N. Peace Prize. "The Fonz," was going to be our graduation examination of the issues should include a Henry Winkler will probably deliver a strong speaker, I was disappointed, to say the least. look at the systems that are used. Opinion Editor message, but he will never be given the credit he Arthur Fonzarelli, aside from being a For example, comments based solely on Aaron J. Mason deserves, .simply because people only view him as symbol of sexism and patriarchy, is of little a look at descriptive statistics for the "The Fonz." There's no getting around that, since social value. What constitutes an college can be deceptive. And your appropriate speaker? Perhaps someone who suggestions that rising grades might result Accent Editor he's famous for it. But before passing judgment, at Devon Dams­ understands, and has been noted for from students being smarter or teachers least listen to what he has to say. meaningful social contributions. To be being better today are irrelevant with O'Connor perfectly honest, at some level I feel respect to the basic concept of a norm­ insulted. referenced grading system, which you Asst. Accent Editor Amazing opportunities After four years of college, I am given seemed to assume universal in your Greg ford Last year's creation of the Center for Faculty the knowledge of Henry Winkler at my references to the curve. Research and Development by Provost Jim Malek most proud moment? Graduation is Sports Editor" was a great direction for the college to take. In its supposed to be symbolic of all we've GORDON ROWLAND Associate Professor and Chairman, Gerilyn M. Curtin first year alone, faculty worked on 51 projects. accomplished as students. To present the Fonz as our farewell orator is simply Organizational Communication, Leaming, A recently announced five-year grant of $660,000 and Design Asst. Sports Editor inappropriate. I feel the selection will improve the center greatly, allowing faculty to committee really did a poor job this year. John Davis spend more time on research, community outreach, Spring Break column pedagogical and teaching studies projects. The WILLIAM NASSAU '00 Photo Editor funding will also allow the college to hire supports socialist view Melissa Thornley replacements to fill in for professors working on their scholarship. Tenure at the college The Young Democratic Socialists have Asst. Photo Editor The ceflter has fulfilled a number of needs that was a rewarding one been hard at work since mid-last semester Alex Morrison weren't possible before it was created in terms of trying to provoke students to think critically research and development. Associate Professor I can't say enough about the student about their lives on an economic, athletes, coaches and administration here. environmental and social level. Chief Proofreader Linda McBride, psychology, is a perfect example of Although short, my stay at Ithaca was In that spirit, I would like individuals to Kylie Yerka a faculty member who has benefitted from the truly memorable. Everything about this take a closer look at Matt Bonatti's column center. McBride conducted a professional-level place is unique and I can only hope to carry in the March I 6 issue. Although some may Layout Editor research project that studied jury decision-making. on its mystique to Princeton. not realize it, his sentiments about how "it is KaHeHebda Her project gave students the opportunity to help So folks, I appreciate all that you have quite depressing really when you step back with research. Faculty mentorships, such as this done for my family and me, and it is a great and think about how money makes the world Online Editor one, are a much needed addition to a student's day to thank the Bombers. go around," reflect a socialist perspective of Paul Colombo education. The center makes these mentorships our global economy. possible. ERIC JACKSON Matt goes on to say that "Everything can Former football defensive coordinator be spun into a money-making venture, and Asst. Online Editor Malek has moved the college in the right direction the more money that is made simply Lisabeth Pardi with the research and development center. By encourages others to follow suit." Later, he continuing to fund it, through either the operating Grading by professors adds that "every day, the public sees new Sales Manager budget or grants, faculty and students alike will involves many factors advertisements along with the increased Sarah Schram benefit in ways that weren't imaginable in the past. commercialization of the world around us." In a recent article and editorial [March The truth is, Matt's analysis of the world Business Manager 16] you seemed to assume that all grading around him is 9ne that is not only correct, Laura Lubrano ITHACAN INFORMATION systems involve "curves." The curve but dishearteningly accurate. connotes the predetennined shape of grade Letters to the editor are due by 5 p.m. the Monday before pub­ Although he may be able to identify Manager. Student lication, and should include name, phone number. major and distribution in a nonn-referenced grading many of the money-hungry ills that consume Publications year ofgraduation. system. Some central point, say the­ our society, Matt has failed to realize that his Lel/ers must be fewer than 250 words and typewrillen. The average score on a test, is established and J. M°IChaelSerino Ithacan reserves the right to edit letters for lensth, clarity and views about this "giant money-making taste. The opinion editor will contact all individuals who submit assigned a grade, and student work is machine" are extremely socialist. Although le11ers. sorted above and below by how it he hasn't hit up on any theory yet, and may Opinions expressed on these pages do not necessarily reflect compares. At least some faculty members, still be far from being able to defend his those offaculty, staffand administration. "Our View" reflects myself included, use a criterion-referenced ideas·in an actual debate, the foundation to Calendar editors - the editorial opinion of The Ithacan. Melissa Fisch, Jill Hughes A sin8le copy ofThe Ithacan is available from an authorized system instead. pursue socialism is there. . distrihutwn poim lo any individual within Tompkins County. We establish criteria for each area of a The word socialism turns some people Copy editing staff - Multiple copies and mail subscriptions are available from The Rachel Berlin, Jon Carey, Ithacan office. Please call (607) 274-3208 for rates. course and then assess student work off. I wonder, though, if many people realize Adam Coleman, Mehssa AlfJtfzaca College students, regardless ofmajor, are invited to against them. Work not meeting the criteria what it means to think from a socialist Fisch, Ben Rosenthal, join The Ithacan staff. Interested students should contact an edi­ receives.a lower grade, while work perspective. Mr. Bonatti has already Knsten Racki, Chns tor or manager listea to tlze left or visit The Ithacan office in Park Franklin, Came Cochran, exceeding them, higher. A higher grade is demonstrated that he may ... what about Vanessa Leong Hall Room 269. Mailing address: 269 Park Hall, Ithaca College, Ithaca, N. Y., thus a sign of accomplishments exceeding you? Layout staff - /4850-7258 expectations rather than of success in a Schuyler Costello, Enc Telephone: (607) 274-3208 Fax: (607) 274-/565 competition with peers. Lears, Laura Viapiano, E-mail: [email protected] KIA KOZUN '02 Knstrn Haegele, Steve World Wide Web: www.ithaca.edu/ithacan This does not diminish the possibility of Co-Chairwoman, Young Democratic Ralg, Jessica Sippel grade "inflation," however. Socialists THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 2000 THE ITHACAN 13 America's battle against fire arms: The solution starts in the home cfrds

In light of the recent shootjngs in MATT Michigan, I thought it was time to present BONATTI the other side of the great gun debate. I am not a ~ember of the NRA, nor am I even Ithacan slightly interested in firearms. However, I Columm.11 still feel compelled to respond to the current anti-gun hysteria. My father is a New York state The daily battle conservation officer as well as an avid hunter and marksman.So, I have spent most of my in the bathroom life in a house with many guns. And I'm still .------alive today. My You have a I0a.m.clas,. father taught me a Unfortunately, your alarm great reverence for doesn't go off and you wake up at the power of a gun. 9:30 a.m. You thmk to your~clf, From the time I "I have lllne for a 4u1ck ,hower was old enough to right before my cla~s." But then understand, it was you hear the unm1~1akabk raulc made abundantly of the custodian's cart and your clear to me that of stomach plummets. In a mad the myriad of things dash, you grab your towel, wap in the house that I and rubber ducky and run toward 1(risten ~clif should not touch, my the door. What happens next fecb father's guns were like slow motion. Guest Writer the most important. RICHARD LEE/KNIGHT-RIDDER You open the door and step out Dad did his part too, TAMARLA OWENS wipes her eye as she appears at a preliminary hearing in Genesee mto the hall. At the other end of always keeping his County Family Court March 1 in Flint, Mich. Owens is the mother of the boy who shot his the hall stands the custodian. Like firearms out of reach or in a locked cabinet. first-grade classmate, Kayla Rolland, Tuesday at an elementary school in Mount Morris a duel in an old western movie, In all my life, I have never touched one of his Township, Mich. The court referee has now taken jurisdiction over her three children. you stand there facing each other. guns without supervision. mentor. I've lived very safely with guns all my the chance to be mentors to children. It's Minute after minute passes as you My father also made sure to satisfy my life, and because of this, I know that guns are important to educate the children in our lives try to stare each other down, natural curiosity about weapons. He called one cau~c of senseless violence in our society. about weapons. Expose them to guns, and to neither of you wanting to give. me into the room when he was cleaning a Many kids are not as lucky as I was. They the danger of misusing such a powerful Suddenly, the custodian makes a rifle to show me the parts. He called me into have parents who arc not available to them weapon. This way, when this child comes move. Adrenaline takes over as the yard when he was target shooting. He for whatever reason, whether they work too across a gun later on, he or she will know the you run toward the bathroom. You even offered to teach me how to shoot. much or arc simply too involved in their proper way to act around it. pace the custodian stride for Dad also made sure to tell me all the rules own lives to make time for their children. In the 20 years of my life, I have never stride, each of you trying to be the concerning weapons, the most important of So, the kids become immersed in what they once seen a gun jump out and kill another first to reach the bathroom. TI1en, all being never to point a gun-at another see on television, and the adults in their lives person. It's always the person in control of just before you reach the door, you person, even when you're sure it's not loaded. arc not there to separate fiction from reality. the gun that does the killing. Stupidity and realize that your shower shoes My father never hesitated to answer any of . When these kids get angry at another irreverence around a very dangerous object were not made for running and my questions, or to make himself available to person, they've had no other examples of have been the cause of many deaths over the you trip. The ducky goes Hymg me in the event that I wanted to learn to use a how to resolve conflict, so, to them, it's past few years. Take the time to talk to the and just as you hit the ground you gun. This way, I was never once given the perfectly reasonable to take a gun and kill children in your life about gun safety. You'll see the custodian calmly walk into opportunity to take a gun out by myself and another person. be glad you did. the bathroom. It is over, for now. play with it. He never gave me the chance. One day, some of us will be teachers, and OK, chances are that isn't I've been lucky that I've had such a great many of us will be parents. We'll all have Kristen Racki is a sophomore English major. going to happen, but the problem still is very real. As everyone who lives on campus knows, students Debates and commentaries will appear In this spot each week. To have your voice heard, call Opinion Editor Aaron Mason at 274-3208. are no longer pennitted to go into the bathrooms while the custodian is in there cleaning. It even goes so far that students can be judicially referred if they enter lfhacan J.he bathroom while the custodian is in there. I think that's pretty nqu1rer funny. Is it really necessary to hold a judicial hearing just ~,;;,, ...... ,\ t?":-.., , --· because someone went into the : t~:~,,,- \~'·;,_/ bathroom?Think of all the possible repercussions of this judicial hearing. "Congratulations Matt! Jessica Welch You've just won the lottery! Now Sport Management '03 let's just check your record ... Uh­ oh, Matt - you were once judicially referred for going into the bathroom while it was being cleaned. I'm sorry but we cannot Aron Gutman award you any money." Or Program Director tor Hillel perhaps ... "Mau, say hello to your new baby boy! Let me just take one quick look at your record ... Oh no! I'm going to have to take the baby back, Matt. 'Put the baby back in. I repeat, put the baby back in. Matt was once judicially referred for going into the bathroom while it was being cleaned."' Closing off the bathrooms is unnecessary, and being judicially Jenn Bartlett referred for violating that rule is a English Education '01 joke. For some rea<;on, the custodians insist on com mg somewhere around 8 to IO a.111. i,~ai Foundation of (even the time vanes from day lo 'Education with Jeff Claus day). This is also the tim.:: when he awesome Jon Bennett ,,tiacause is an bathroom traffic 1, at its peck . Finance '03 .\: , :-pf'9fessor an·d you team a lot What sense docs that make'! Why the education system." ·about not just come later m the day when there is less bathroom traffic, or even have a set schedule as to when each bathroom 1!> being cleaned so that student, can plan accordingly. ls 11 that difficult? Photos by Jen Blanco Matt Bonatti is a sophomore television-radio major. 14 THE ITHACAN THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 2000 e judges have ruled. THE NEW YORK PRESS ASSOCIATION • Best overall college Photography, First Place- newspaper In New York Katie Schlee · - "Wow! Top-notch professional shot. Not only is the goalie State captured, but the worried player below. Nice going!" The Ithacan scored first place in the NYPA's 1999 Better College Newspaper Contest with 75 points. The Ithacan is in Division 2 (open to college newspapers published less than three times a week).

General Excellence, First Place "Quality publication. Sound writing, good photos and ads. Sound editorials. Good enterprise reporting on the campus safety issue. This paper is most impressive for its graphics and excellent layout and design. Features aren't the same tired stories. Sports coverage is thorough. Arts and entertainment section impressive. Congratulations on a job well done."

Design, First Place · "Clean design that brings together layout, typography, and good photos. Quality of No.1 appearance continues beyond News Story, Third Place-Kate page one. Subhead, mugs, thumbnails and other design 0 aids boost appeal and make stories reader-friendly." HIits, The culture ·of endowed chairs" "Well-researched story that sheds light onan often misunderstood element of school funding. Writing is Online Excellence, Second Place clean. Story is not timely but deserving of recognition and "Nice site, good job of updating news daily." honor. Good solid work."

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Nowyou Thursday The Ithacan t March 23, 2000 Page 15 4 ·en.-~ ' - ~ -.y,, -,_ • ,'< -~ Cc-. ,.. , . ,...... ' 16 THE ITHACAN THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 2000 Affrtnt ~~~~~~ work~~hit Handwerke~g

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The contemporary artist most fa­ mous for his paintings of Camp­ bcll 's soup cans and Marilyn Monroe has part of his palette on display in Ithaca College's own Handwerker Gallery. A series of 10 silk screens, titled "Endangered Species," by Andy Warhol features large square images in vivid hues of turquoise, electric Kathryn green and magenta. "The gallery is one of the few McLaughlin very important galleries in Tomp­ Exploratory '03 kins County," said Gallery Direc­ tor and Associate Professor of art Jelena Stojanovic. "The gallery has Hometown: Coventry, A.I. proven, I think, that this is a very Accomplishment I am important and wonderful place to most proud of: Getting a have this caliber of art work." 3.8 last semester. One silk screen, "Black Rhi­ What I'd be doing if I noceros," photographed by Mo- . weren't here: Surfing, hammed Amin, is of the giant two­ preferably in California. homed beast in a half kneeling pos­ Things I can do without: ture. The background is a fiery flat . MICHAEL SCHRAMM/THE l"Tl·IACAN Credit card harassers. peach, a cross between a sunset and SENIORS BRYAN GODFREY-LANOUE (left) and Mellssa Batajl look at Andy Warhol's work In the an orange crayon. Warhol paid spe­ Best word in the English "Endangered Species" exhibit In the Handwerker Gallery Monday. The exhibit will run through April 16. language: Sublime. cial attention to the features of the through April 16 and can be seen What TV show I don't worried face, highlighting the issues of the time. The focus of this Washington University, were done toward the end of Warhol's Monday through Friday from I 0 miss: Party of Five. sagging wrinkles under a pair of particular collection is ecological. Sophomore Denitsa Savakova, life in 1983. a.m. to 6 p .. m., Saturdays from I 0 Three things that can wide eyes. This piece was done a gallery assistant, said this partic­ "The point of Warhol's work is a.m. to 2 p.m. and Sundays from 2 always be found in my with nine screens and 11 colors. Other works in the exhibit in­ ular sample of Warhol's worlc is a that he was striving all his life to to 6 p.m .. Admission is free. refrigerator: Cool whip, clude a magenta "Giant Panda" and bit different than the paintings for create work, which will exhibit this Stojanovic said this is a good strawberries and humus. a garish red, violet and yellow which he is most famous. indifference or maybe ambiva­ time to visit the Handwerker People might be striped head of "Grevy's Zebra." 'These are definitely different in lence, so maybe to speak about the Gallery since there are three col­ surprised to know that I: Stojanovic said having a well­ terms of subject matter and the me­ difference should be something that lections being shown simultaneously Dance. known artist's work shown on dia of silk screen is more interest­ each visitor should decide for him throughout the gallery. In addition Ideal Vacation: Hawaii. campus benefits students and fac­ ing," Savakova said. or herself," Stojanovic said. to Warhol's "Endangered Species" Recommended Web site: ulty in several ways. First, it is a Savakova said her favorite According to the Warhol Muse­ silk screens, still showing are parts www.emode.com. representative example of pop art, piece in the show is of a large but­ um in his hometown of Philadelphia of C. Hadley Smith's photography Where I'll be in 1 O years: which Stojanovic said is one of the terfly because of the vibrant colors (www.warhol.org), "Andy Warhol is works "Imaging Ithaca College," In a warm foreign country most important art movements of used in the work. one of the most ·influential Ameri­ which are glimpses of campus life dancing. the 20th century. Also, Warhol ex­ These 10 silk screens, part of a can artists of the 20th century." from 1950.to 1975, and also a se­ amines some of the prevalent social permanent collection at Eastern The Warhol exhibit will run ries of students' work.

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• THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 2000 THE ITHACAN 1 7 Poet laureate to speak at Ithaca BY KIM AYER of more than 2,000 people of every state, race, Staff Writer accent and background in an archive for the ages. "Horsehide White: the color/ Of nothing. Bringing in his New Jersey background, Color of the past/ And of the future, of the his own work 1s just as diverse as the patch­ movie screen/ At rest and of blank paper." work of talent in his project. Unlike some po­ The object being described in this passage ets, who may come across as lofty, he car­ is a baseball. Taken from the poem "Night ries his title lightly. His work seems to in­ Game" by Robert ·l>insky, this excerpt corporate as many different levels of Amer­ shows his style of taking the ordinary and el­ ican speech and experience as possible. His evating it to reveal its true beauty. range of topics 1s extremely broad and down­ Pinsky, the current poet laureate consul­ to-earth, Assistant Professor Mary Beth O' - tant in poetry at the Library of Congress, will Connor, writing. ~aid. be visiting Ithaca College Monday at T~: This reputation for modesty i~ fueled hy tor I02 to inaugurate the Distinguishe~ his wnting. which focuses on everyday top­ Speaker in the Humanities Series. The pur­ ics such as telev1s1ons, shirts and the alpha­ pose of this series, presented by the School bet. In his poem "ABC," Pinsky creatively of Humanities and Sciences, is to make peo­ uses the letters of the alphabet in succession ple more aware of the humanities programs to piece together lines like "Any body can on campus. die, evidently," which form a fun, expressive "The notion here is to call attention to the thought. importance of the humanities in leading a Pinsky has accomplished a great deal aca­ fuller, richer life," said Dean Howard Erlich demically as well. A graduate of Rutgers Uni­ of the School of Humanities and Sciences. versity, Pinsky went on to do his master's and Erlich will be giving the introduction to doctoral work in English at Stanford Uni­ the series and Professor and Chainnan versity. Michael Twomey, English, will be intro­ He currently juggles the responsibilities ducing Pinsky. of poet laureate with his position as a pro­ Pinsky fell in love with the spoken word fessor of creative writing at Boston Uni­ at a young age by reading the dictionary and versity. daydreaming about the way words sound, the Pinsky has also written five books, poet said in a recent interview with the Cort­ which will be available for sale and auto­ land Review. This fascination with sounds is graphing, and become a notable translator the main topic of his address Monday. with his work on 'The Inferno of Dante." His "I believe that the medium of poetry - book, "The Figured Wheel: New and Col­ real poetry, for me - is ultimately breath, lected Poems 1966- I 996," was nominated for one person's breath shaped into meaning by the Pulitzer Prize in poetry and was award­ our larynx and mouth," Pinsky said in an on­ COURTESY OF OFFICE OF PUBLIC INFORMATION ed the Ambassador Book Award and the POET LAUREATE ROBERT PINSKY, the first Distinguished Speaker In the line interview. Lenore Marshall Award. Humanities Serles, will address the college on Monday. He will be focusing on sound. The influence of sound can be seen all Pinsky has also tapped into the online throughout his work. Pinsky opens his hard consonants. nationwide project enforces oral tradition by world. Although spoken poetry is superior, poem "The Want Bone" with "The tongue In an effort to share his passion for spo­ recording the voices of people as they read Pinsky said he favors anything that will ex­ of the waves tolled in the earth's bell." This ken poetry, Pinsky has developed the Favorite their favorite poems. pose people to poetry. He established line shows Pinsky's tendency to describe Poem Project, whjch is one of his major ob­ This idea, originally intended for only I 00 www.favoritepoem.org to bring his project sound with vivid imagery emphasized by jectives since becoming poet laureate. This people, has grown to encompass the voices to the maximum amoun~ of people. OuMawfi»J

VHS DVD ~Oun!J 1. The Bone Collector I. Taxi Driver 2. Eyes Wide Shut 2. Seven ;tlfum11i 3. Jakob the Liar 3. Heat 4. Outside Providence 4. Mission: Impossible ;tlward 5. Plunkett & Macleane S.Aliens

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Jonathan Hazman is President and Owner of Ready to Uve, Le~ Eam in the most White Marsh Dialysis Centers, Inc. in Baltimore. magical place on eart1tfl\en become part of the After watching his grandfa­ ther go through .· Walt Disney ~d ~~ Program. It's your dialysis in a way he saw as opportunity to~ i' ~Ji-ter making friends, impersonal, he founded White Marsh Dialysis making m1aalC-ill'NJ ~ng a difference. Centers in 1997 to offer a more humane approach to the process. As Jonathan says, "I want my patients to March 29, 2000 dialysize to live, not live to Register for Elli 2000 Courses dialysize." His efforts were 6:00pm rewarded in May 1998, It's Safe - FUN -Affordable when he received the Young Center for New Science Entrepreneur of the Year PE 107 Room 112 award from the U.S. Small Course Credit Business Administration's Beginner Scuba The Nallon's Leader :, '1 ·. Baltimore District Office. in On Campus Un­ derwater Educat10n The'A/umni Association will honor him with this award at Reunion, June 1-4, 2000. Ithaca College Alumni Association ,(,-~-~.OfficcofAlumnl Relations nationa laq uatic.com 1 1 • -- • • 210Alumni Hall f, . www.ithaca.edu/alumni ~..1>~·.Y'Ph: 274-1392 • Fax 274-1370 1-800-SEA-DIVE 18 THE ITHACAN THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 2000 How long did it take you to park this morning}

Do you have a strong opinion on the parking situ.ation here at Ithaca College? ,...

~ Write a commentary for The Ithacan . .

Contact Opinion Editor Aaron Mason at 274-3208 or stop by Park 269 for more information. Park your point of view in The Ithacan.

Who will win? Who should win?

Log on to see Ithacan Accent reviewer's picks for this year's Academy THE AREAS LARGEST & BEST TANNING CENTERS '1SIJ.... ftl9 Awards. OVER 50 TANNING UNITS ~I&,'~ OVER 1000 APPOINTMENTS PER DAY STAND-UPS LAY-DOWNS OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

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Spending hours putting up Items are arranged in simple cat- There are opportunities for posters and Hiers on campus just egories for buyers and everyone at wasn't making it. Penn State sellers to use. In addition to new lthacaAuction.com. Local students Ben Mandell, Nicole and used goods, the site can be businesses are encouraged to Wright, and Jim Szewc created a used for rentals, list items and become advertis- better way to buy and sell - professional services, ers; and even charities can lthacaAuctio_n.co~. a free, local roommates.jobs, swaps, and benefit. For each new regis- lntemet auction site. In fact, other categories. Sellers can set tcred user you sign up for they've started a company to ere- a starting sale price and a lthacaAuction.com, your ate ~undreds of these sites in uni- deadline for bids. The highest charity can receive SI. vers1ty towns, bid at the end of the auction Charitable auctions can also be VillageAuction.com. period gets the goods. arranged. Just e-mail [email protected]. Here's how it works. Log on to One of the nice things about a . lthacaAuction.com and register local auction i~ that you can pick The site will be monitored for by typing in your name, a up or deliver your legality and honesty in trading nickname, home address, and auctioned items locally. No and advertising. Students and e-mail address. You'll see the shipping or waiting. You can see townspeople are encouraged to agreement and be provided with the buyer or seller face to face, . log on and try out this free a password. Afer that, you can paying locally and auction Web site at buy and sell as often as you like, trading locally. The possibilities lthacaAuction.com. absolutely FREE. are greater, too. Try arranging a It's like we say sublet or selling a used sofa on a "If you don't want it, national auction site! somebody else does!"

. . THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 2000 THE ITHACAN 19 Students journey to film festival BY GREG STORMS group gathered at the hotel for Staff Writer "heated, heated discussion," G1tkin said. Often these "classes" Parties, mingling with film­ would last late enough for some of makers, staying up all night, the group to not bother with sleep­ watching films all day for six days ing until after the next night\ straight - sound like a typical field screening. trip? As well as submersion in the ex­ Those were just some of the ac­ perimental-film culture that drives tivities 14 cinema and photography Ann Arhor and the discussion It majors took advantage of last sparks, the trip provided a view of week. The students were part of a how festivals work. Both Gatten field trip to the 38th annual Ann Ar­ and the attending students rccog­ bor Film Festival organized by As­ ni1,cd that the award-giving •~ a sistant Professor David Gatten, process obviously dictated hy the cinema and photography. three judges. After a nine-hour ride to Michi­ Though many filmmakers gan in a college van, the group got have the Feb. l 5 entry deadline settled and went to the festival's "emblazoned" on their minds, opening reception. With people they and the viewers "know what coming in from the streets for free to think of the awards and how food and drink, "It was chaos," much weight to give them because sophomore Adam Hark said. you know who is g1vmg them," said The opening party was the stu­ Gatten, because people arc able to dents' first exposure to the festival's sec the Judge~ and their films atmosphere. every day. Because a lot of filmmakers For some.Just getting away from come and make themselves acces­ Ithaca area was helpful. sible, the students have unique op­ "Distance was good because it portunities to talk to the artists in put a new perspective on things," an infonnal manner, Gatten said. OSIRIS FLORES/THE ITHACAN VanGrunsven said. "It gave me a "Talking to the filmmakers SOPHOMORES (from left) Arlana Hamidi, Danielle Gltkln, Benjamin Westlake and Assistant Professor whole other slant on how I'm look­ David Gatten, cinema end photography, return to Ithaca after a nine-hour ride from Michigan. was great, talking about the ing at my work now." process and the technical aspects, nior Cheryl VanGrunsven said. ing, the independent experimental tition, commenced at 7 p.m. each Gatten won the festival's grand but also just getting to know them Having the filmmakers there and film," he said. night and would last until approx­ prize in 1997 for his fi Im "Hard­ as people," sophomore Danielle understanding they are human Typically, the day for the Itha­ imately l a.m. wood Process" and an honorable Gitkin said. was a good aspect to the trip, she ca College attendees started When the screenings ended, it mention this year for "Moxon 's Me­ Students enjoyed s~aking said. around 9 a.m., when they would was time for fate-night discussions. chanic Exercises, or: the Doctrine with filmmakers Jay Rosenblatt and Though an intensive schedule of take the van to town to attend a This burgeoning tradition began of Handy works Appl icd to the Art . J Nadia Roden and watching their watching films was the focus of the morning workshop, seminar or when Gatten's Art Institute of of Printing." films, along with speaking to fes­ week, Gatten said it was not the fcs­ presentation. After lunch there Chicago students - whom he had The Ann Arbor Film Festival is tival director Vicki Honeyman. tival 's most important aspect. were screenings of judges' films, taken to the festival two previous the nation's oldest 16mm festival. It "Being around the filmmakers "Even more important ... was filmmaker question-and-answer years - asked, "Can we have class tours yearly, and will be in Ithaca was an experience that we don't seeing that there is an entire culture sessions and other options. The bulk now?" Sept. IO and I 2 at Cornell Cinema, nonnally get as much at school," ju- that's built around short filmmak- of the festival, the films in compe- Regardless of the late hour, the and at Ithaca College on Nov. 27.

SAB Movie Times: Tonight could be the night • You crawl into a burning building • You free someone from a car "Clerks" • You perform CPR Friday, March 24, 7 p.m. • You save a life Saturday, March 25, 9:30 p.m. '· "Mal I rats" Are you up to the challenge? Friday, March 24, 9:30 p.m. Sunday, March 26, 8 p. m. Become a bunker.

"Chasing Amy" • Work as a volunteer firefighter Friday, March 24, midnight Tuesday, March· 28, 8 p. m. (Clark Lounge) two nights a week • Live for free in a All movies are in Textor 102 city fire station (except Tuesday) • South Hill Station next to campus Costs: • Off-campus $2 per movie or 3 for $5 housing authorized ..

Apply now for next, year! For more information: Marcia Lynch Ithaca Fire Department 272-1234 www.ifd.baka.com 20 THE ITHACAN THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 2000

John Rouse .Le~~Fom "Home" 'London BY JOHN TABIN Staff Writer JEFF MILLER The electrifying Eels John Rouse's "Home," though firmly Staff Writer rooted in the pop-folk tradition of the hen a band that has waded in lyrical middle-American singer-songwriter, darkness for two albums comes out MUSIC REVIEW presents an unusually sophisticated Night train W to play in the sunny, rainbow-filled. instrumental backdrop to its typically daylight, something ml!st be up. The Eels, the The Eels unremarkable lyrics. band whose transformation mimics the one just Not content with a standard troika of adventures mentioned, has made triumph over sorrow a guitar or piano, drum and bass, Rouse I hate night trains. catalyst to write and create an amazing album, "Daisies of the works with various combinations of Before Spring Break, I was which exudes quirkiness and wit. The album, Galaxy" between five and nine players on instru­ looking forward to my train "Daisies of the Galaxy," the third from Cali­ ments as diverse as the violin and cello, ride from Prague to Paris. It fornia's Eels, is an emotional makeover of trumpet and trombone, and assorted was an 18-hour journey that melody mixed with a resurgence of amazing less:traditional instruments. Though the had the potential to be exciting. lyrics about interesting topics. Eels has its J:Meritt disc never strays very far into experi­ I wa~ interested to look at chance to become a household name for the The 11/Jacan rates albums from mentation, the standard pop rhythms on Staff Writer 1 (worst) 10 4 (best) Europe from the window of a new millennium with this album that shows the such a wide variety of instruments train. which I had been told is true feeling of this talented and underrated trio. make for a very interesting sound. the only way to sec the The album start,; with a solid blast of a mil­ a rant Beck would write makes this abstract Rouse's voice compliments the contrnent. itary drum and bugle corps styling followed song even more appealing. music well with its airy, mellow quality, I asked at the train tenninal by an acoustic guitar and lapstcel that accen­ The album's most abrupt title houses the but his words, like most of the mean­ whether I was on the right train, tuate the mellow lyrics about longing for some­ most sensitive and beautiful sentiments. "It's ingless gibberish which passes for pop which was running from Prague thing better in the song "Grace Kelly Blues." a Motherf***er" talks about a love and long­ lyrics, add little. Typical of Rouse's pro­ to Frankfurt, where I would "Packing Blankets," a song about a new be­ ing more deeply then any song I have heard fundity is the hero-worship song connect to a train to Pans. ginning, came from the Eels frontman E, in a long time. "Marvin Gaye," wondering "Is it in your After around 10 minutes of whose mother died before the second album "Daisy Through Concrete" starts with ad­ hair... ls it physical/There's no way to attempting to ask the C,ech­ was released. This new tune, an optimistic look vice to all, "Wake up the dying don't wake up know," sung as if this hackneyed medi­ speakmg conductor, I just at starting over after a tragedy, proves that E the dead change what your saying don't change tation on the mystery of star power pointed to the ticket and has mastered the ability to turn pain into the what you said," while the triplicate beat pro­ was something incredibly original. pointed to the train. He nodded. profound. pels the lyrical pattern, making this song an­ In spite of the shortcomings in the I followed all of the "The Sound of Fear" is a rolling piece filled other thoughtful gem. writing, its musical qualities may make pointers. I found a cabin that with guitar, organ, xylophone and interesting "Tiger in My Tank," "Jeannie's Diary" and this CD worth a listen for interested looked empty. I put my bags lyrics like "Some people like to call me Chuck/ "Wooden Nickels" are all short but solid ad­ folk fans. under my legs and my head, to it's Charles and you are shit out of luck" that ditions to this incredibly tight album that shows deter thieves. The conductor show the playfulness in the song-writing that much growth for this delightfully strange and came in and stamped my has been missing in some of Eels' earlier songs. innovative band. can pick up the Eels' lyrics in three to four lis­ ticket. I tried to sleep. People The joviality shines through further when The hidden last track and first single "Mr. tens with one tiny difference__:_ the Eels' songs kept poking their heads in and E and his cohorts make fun of astronaut wives E's Beautiful Blues" is a perfect end for this are intelligent and powerful. For people who generally looking dodgy. Time and grocery store workers while praising bright and fun album accentuating a positive want a new perspective on life and maybe a passed. It was 4:30 a.m. winged animals in "I Like Birds," adding even attitude with the remarks "God damn right it's little inspiration, "Daisies of the Galaxy" will I hadn't slept. more fun to this unusually happy album. a beautiful day." The preceding statement is give you both. The rest who are happy with The door busts open. A xylophone creates the feeling you are in a great one to have on any kind of spring or the way things are should take a listen any­ Screaming. In Gennan. At me. a Tim Burton movie in the bizarre song "Fly­ summer mix tape. way, because it is a slick masterpiece that will "Passport. NOW!!!!" swatter." A lyrical rollercoa,;ter that feels like Like N'Sync and Christina Aguilera, one inspire even the uninspirable. The policeman looks at the ticket. Then al me. Then the ticket. The other policeman steps up on the seat opposite me and "Final Destination" raises up the roof slate. He -<-~e,Reel looks into the ventilation system with his flashlight. I nearly pee on myself. I imagine WOrld BY RYAN VOORIS myself in German prison. I Contributing Writer don't like the thought at all. *** I get my passport back. Can you cheat death? Can you beat' I think I'm done with Pretty woman grows up the force that eventually finds us all? excitement. I try to sleep. The new film, "Final Destination,· from 6: 15 a.m. My train is due few weeks ago, fellow Ithacan writer James Wong and Glen Morgan, both into Frankfurt at 6:30 a.m. The Greg Storms reviewed the Blood­ MOVIEREVI~ veterans of "The X-Files; asks these door to my compartment opens Ahound Gang's album "Hooray for perplexing questions. again. Boobies." While this title is certainly appro­ "Erin Brockovich" If along the way they throw in "Ticket?" I've already priate for the group's funny, if not sophomoric, numerous teen-age deaths, the most given one conductor my lyrics, it works just as well for Julia Roberts' Directed by: Steven amazing airline crash I've ever seen on Eurorail pass. They have latest film, "Erin Brockovich." Just the trail­ Soderbergh film and plenty of frights that'll make already stamped it. I hand it to ers for the film featured more cleavage than Starring: Julia Roberts, you grab your date's arm, it's all the the new conductor, and ask the latest Mariah video, which is no easy feat. Albert Finney, Aaron more reason to watch this horror flick. Devon Sawa stars as a high school "Are we going to be on time to That said, Roberts proves why she hasn't need­ Eckhart Frankfurt?" senior traveling to Paris. When board- . ed to rely on her looks for the past decade as ing the plane he has a horrific vision of ·· She looks at me, and hands her excellent acting make this good movie it exploding mid-air. me my ticket back. "No great. (;reg Pora Assistant Accent *Ths Ithacan * ratss * movies Iran Full of panic, Sawa's character exits Frankfurt. Stuttgart." "Erin Brockovich" tells the based-on-truth Editor 1 (worsl) to 4 (best) the plane, along with five others. When Hmmn. story of Brockovich (Roberts) and her strug­ the plane eventually explodes it seems She gives me the gles to provide for her three kids. With served for younger and less talented actress­ these six individuals have escaped international "one minute" two ex-husbands and no higher education, es. But as Brockovich says to Ed, "as long as death. Yet, death is not finished with finger-in-the-air sign. I take out Brockovich has a tough time finding a job, and I have one ass instead of two, I'll wear what them. my map. Stuttgart is in South her life gets even worse when she gets into a I want." Roberts is only 33 years old, and per­ This time, however, it's not a slasher Germany. I'm not too far off. car accident that is not her fault. Brockovich's haps she took the role in celebration of the 10- in a mask or a quick tongued murderer She returns to my cabin attorney, Ed Masry (Albert Finney), is not year anniversary of "Pretty Woman." Not many chasing them, but a mysterious force with a timetable. able to win the case, bringing her to a new low actresses could pull off a part that requires the that none can deny, but all must face. I point to Paris on my map. point. But by using her personality, which is character to be both commanding and sexy, but "Final Destination• pulls this off effec­ 'Tm going there today ... can I a combination of stubbornness and a skimpy because of Roberts' abilities, she succeeds. In tively and convincingly in a horror film get there from Stuttgart?" wardrobe, Brockovich get,; a job at Masry's one scene, Brockovich is hunting for some I'd definitely recommend bringing a "Frankfurt?" office. · government documents guarded by a young date to. "No, Paris," I repeat, The movie takes off when Brockovich be­ man. Instead of getting the information the pointing again. gins to research a real estate case between the official way, Brockovich uses her assets to get wears a loose tie and is seemingly uncomfort­ Recognition across her large utility company PG&E and the people into the backroom, with the clerk stuttering his able when Brockovich is aroun~. but manages face. "Paree? Yes, Stuttgart who live nearby. Apparently, PG&E is letting okays. The poor man had no chance against to hold his own and is actually brilliant in some Paree 10:15." a harmful chemical contaminate the water sup­ her, and she knew it. scenes. "Thank you." ply and causing the people to get sick. It is a Another trait of Brockov'kh's are the pas­ "Erin Brockovich" is a solid drama, fun­ I sleep on my train to Pans, typical David vs. Goliath tale from then on, with sionate speeches she gives that barely let up for ny when it ne_eds to be and captivating rrnssrng the beautiful French a romance between Brockovich and a biker her to catch her breath. These speeches arc pow­ throughout. While there are a few confusing countryside to maintain my thrown m to keep things interesting. erful and funny, leaving the other characters in elements, both in the law and romance aspects, sanity. The movie works because of the characters, a stunned silence and the audience cheering and it has a lot more positives. Something that and director Steven Sodcrbergh puts them in applauding. could have made this movie better: the real Junior Jeff Miller is in London places where they shine. As I began to learn Even though Roberts' speeches and Erin Brockovich recently told Charlie Rose during the spring semester. about this movie, I honestly thought Roberts wardrobe draw the most attention, Albert that Roberts was too conservative with her was making a mistake by taking on a role re- Finney complements her as her boss. He always wardrobe. THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 2000 THE ITHACAN 21

• • 1ve The sound of the 'Sea' Vie USIC mes BY RICK MATTISON The following is valid for Staff Writer Friday through Thursday, March 23: They have a song titled "Bong Hits and Porn." . Hoyts Ithaca 1 0 Cinemas OK, so maybe some people Pyramid Mall would say college students should 257-2700 be more mature than getting excited over a name like that, but Erin Brockovich - Noon, not me. Neither was the approxi­ 12:30 p.m., 3 p.m., 3:30 mately 30-year-old gentleman in p.m., 6:30 p.m., 7 p.m., 9:30 front of the stage. He decided it p.m., 10 p.m. and Saturday was a good idea to remove his shirt and Sunday at 12:05 a.m. and proclaim how much he loves Final Destination - 12:05 being naked. p.m., 2:20 p.m., 4:55 p.m., This all happened at the Omi­ 7:20 p.m., 9:55 p.m. and nous Seapods show at the Haunt 11:55 p.m. March 16. These were just a few Mission to Mars - 12:15 highlights of the evening, which put into perspective the way Seapods p.m., 3:15 p.m., 6:45 p.m., is seen by the music community and 9:45 p.m. and Saturday and the comfort zone it has attained with Sunday at midnight. its musical prowess. The Ninth Gate - 3:40 A grandfather of jam rock, p.m., 6:35 p.m. and 9:35 p.m. Seapods plays to the crowd and has CASEY MCGEE/ THE ITHACAN My Dog Skip - Noon, 2:30 a great time while perfonning GUITARIST DANA MONTEITH (front) and drummer Ted Marotta perform during the Ominous Seapods show March 16 at the Haunt. The band blended its jam rock music with a wild on-stage persona. p.m. and 4:50 p.m. beautiful music. Although classified The Next Best Thing - by the label of a jam band, the though. When the music would "Have a Cigar" was also an inter­ for the crowd. Another fun note was 6:55 p.m., 9:25 p.m. and really get pumping he would jump esting part of the show. Earlier in group rarely lets jams extend be­ when Monteith decided to play an Saturday and Sunday at yond two bars more than what it around and slap at the keyboard the evening; the opening band, Citi­ instrument known as a theremin. 11:40 p.m. deems necessary. like a rabbit on coffee. Seapods was zen Zero, played the song, but The lheremin is played by waving Playing music for crowds for a able to blend the music with an Seapods' version of it blew Citizen a hand or object near a metal an­ The Whole Nine Yards - little more than a decade, the band on-stage persona that wove itself Zero's out of the water. It was al­ tenna. The object controls pitch and 7:05 p.m., 10:05 p.m. and has helped to pave the way for such into the perfect blend of groove and most as if Seapods was saying, volume by how close or far away Friday and Saturday at bands as moe., String Cheese Inci­ humility. "OK, you played the song, now it is. 12:10 a.m. dent and Strangefolk. Formed in Al­ The second song of the watch us tear it apart." As drummer Ted Marotta Scream 3 - Friday and bany, Seapods has found a solid fan evening was a cover of "C'Mon The changes throughout the joined in to play the theremin, Mon­ Saturday at 12:15 p.m. base in New York, which was ev­ Baby Let's Go Downtown," and the night were particularly on and it teith exclaimed, "He's masturbat­ The Tlgger Movie - 11 :50 ident at the Haunt. band added its own spice to the was evident Seapods has been to­ ing musically!" This then spurned a.m. and 1:45 p.m. Things looked positive when the song to give it a nice psychedeli~ gether long enough for it lo com­ the crowd chant of "stroke it." Snow Day- 12:20 p.m., band came on stage. The key­ groove. Previously mentioned municate through actions easily. Between "Bong Hits and Porn" 2:35 p.m. and 4:40 p.m. boardist, Brian Mangini, a rather "Bong Hits and Porn" was proba­ Guitarists Dana Monteith and and the crowd chanting "stroke it," Whatever It Takes - 12: 10 short guy with long hair and a bly the highlight of the evening. The Todd Pasternack were the leaders I would say it was a good evening. beard, came out wearing an orange middle segment of the song became and had terrific chemistry. No wait, I will go out and say it was p.m., 2:25 p.m., 4:45 p.m., Hawaiian-style shirt and John spacey before the band kicked it in Monteith and Pasternack ex­ a great evening. Seapods continu­ 7:10 p.m., 9:50 p.m. and Lennon sunglasses. and tore the roof off. changed a good deal of banter dur­ ously puts a smile on my face, and Saturday and Sunday at That wasn't the half of it A rendition of Pink Floyd's ing the down time and provided fun that is generally all I need. 11:50 p.m. Here On Earth-11:15 a.m., 2:15 p.m., 4:35 p.m., 7:15 p.m., 9:40 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday at Accent 11:45 p.m. · Efr1ers Hoyts Ithaca 4 Cinemas Triphammer Mall 266-0717 Celebration of Dance popular music performed by the Ithaca Col­ Boys Don't Cry - 3 p.m., lege Symphonic Band in Emerson Suites 6:50 p.m. and 9:20 p.m. showcases several styles at 7 p.m. Featured faculty soloists include Wonder Boys-3:15 p.m., Ithaca College Theatre's next install­ Assistant Professor Richard Faria, music, 6:40 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. ment of the spring 2000 season, "Beyond on the clarinet; Professor Steven Mauk, American Beauty - 3:30 Words: A Celebration of Dance," will pre­ music, on the saxophone; and Associate p.m., 7 p.m. and 9:40 p.m. miere on Tuesday with an exposition of Professor Harold Reynolds, music, on the Clderhouse Rules - 3:45 tap, ballet, modem dance, ballroom and trombone. jazz. p.m., 6:30 p.m. and 9:10 p.m. Performances will take place each day Singer Ben Lee is opener in Hoerner Theater, Dillingham Center, at Clnemapolls 8 p.m. until April I, with a matinee per­ at Ben Folds Five concert 277-6115 formance al 2 p.m. April I. The opening act for the Ben Folds Five Behghls Blues-7:15 "Beyond Words" features seven concert scheduled for April 16 will be Ben p.m. and Saturday and Sun- · perfonnances choreographed by Depart­ Lee. Tickets are on sale now for $ IO with day matinees at 2:15 p.m. ment of Theatre Arts faculty instructor an Ithaca College ID card, $12 without. Emperor and the Assassin Stacey Cohn (jazz and tap), lecturer Nan­ Ben Folds Five is a North Carolina­ - 9 p.m. and Saturday and cy Gaspar (ballroom), Assistant Professor based trio that has appeared on the Late Sunday matinees at 4 p.m. Jean McGregor (modem) and perfonner­ Show with David Letterman, the Tonight Being John Malkovlch - in-residence Eugenia Wacker-Hoeflin Show with Jay Leno and Saturday Night (ballet). Musical works accompanying Live. 7:15 p.m., 9:35 p.m. and Sat­ the performances will include pieces by urday and Sunday matinees Who will win? Mendelssohn, Brahms, Frank Sinatra and Playwright to discuss new at 2:15 p.m. and 4:35 p.m. the Beastie Boys. Matthew Shepard project Who should win? The 34 student dancers hail from all of Fall Creek the college's five schools, with majors in­ Playwright and Director Moises Kauf­ 272-1256 cluding journalism, accounting, vocal man will discuss his new play, 'The Topsy-Turvy- 7 p.m. and Ithacan reviewers share perfonnance and drama. · Laramie Project," at Ithaca College April Saturday and Sunday mati­ their Academy Award Tickets are on sale at the Ithaca College 11. The play is based on the murder of nees at 2 p.m. box office, with prices ranging from Matthew Shepard, the gay college student Map of the World - 7: 15 picks on line. $3.50 to $9. who was beaten to death because if his sex­ ual orientation. p.m., 9:35 p.m. and Satur­ Log on and see who. ''An Evening at the Pops" The actors, writers and designers of the day and Sunday matinees play conducted more than 200 interviews at 2:15 p.m. and 4:35 p.m. they choose to take highlights new and old with people who had known Shepard, and Tumbleweeds- 7 p.m. home the Oscar. This year's annual "An Evening at the were also present at the defendants' trial. and Saturday and Sunday Pops" concert sponsored by the Friends of The play made its world premier al the matinees at 2 p.m. Ithaca College is titled "Music for the New Denver Center Theater in February and is Magnolia - 8:45 p.m. and www.ithaca.edu/ithacan Millennium," and is slated for Sunday now touring in the United States. Saturday and Sunday mati­ evening. The free presentation will begin at 7:30 nees at 3:45 p.rn. The concert will highlight new and old p.m. in the Emerson Suites. 22 THE ITHACAN _j THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 2000

!''·\ :~J~~; ",'\ ,.\:·,· •••••••• ,,...... • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ...... • • • • • with special kickoff-concert by lthacappella • • Thursday, March 23, 8:00-10:00 p.m. in the pub/coffeehouse • • • • • • • • FOOD Sponsored by Staff Council • • BOOKS Sponsored by Faculty Council : • CLOTHING Sponsored by : Student Government Association • COLLECTION POINTS: Egbert Hall lobby, Muller Faculty • Center (first floor), Emerson Hall lounge, Terrace Dining Hall : You can't spell (second floor), and the Towers Concourse • March 20-23 (last pickup-March 24·at noon) • sent e withOutl ! • Members of the • • campus·community - • are encouraged to • South Hill • participate in the or • Celebration of Service "On the Street Where You Live" • - .. . Sponsored by the Community Service Network • . by organizing their • own projects or by • supporting the events Sponsored by the : ~V~t~T:~~~ lth_aca College • ,, • / ,,,..., ,,.,,,,, t>~ , , and activities listed. Community Alumni • Friday, March 24, 9:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m. • Egbert Ha/I lobby and Phillips Hall north foyer • • • • . For more'information, visit our Web ~It~ at www~~(haca.~µ-(do~ofs~: .,,, ~;J:.AJE: .:::-.): • • or stop ~)! the information tabl~ ln.~gbeit f!iil~ l~bbY,'. M,atd(?~ ·...... ,:·;·,}f;{:i/'' ':{!:'. • • 11 :00 a.m. - 2:00 p:m. Register your commitnity'involvement fol our rec:tf!t/if1~f1Hp1ify. ,. .. .: • • • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••• Support the 14th annual 106-VIC - ''Fifty-Hour Marathon" 4:00 p.m., Friday, March 24-6:00 p.m., Sunday, March 26 Proceeds to benefit the Independence Center ThURSDAY, MARCH 23, 2000 THE ITHACAN 23 Applications for 2000-200 I Editor in Chief of The Ithacan and Editor in Chief of The Cayugan are available in Park room 326 / and are due by noon _on Thursday, March 30. Applicants will be interviewed by the Board of Student Publications on Wednesday, April 3.

The Newspaper for the Ithaca College Community

You are invited ... to attend the Board of Student Publications meeting to ask questions of the candidates. The board, an advisory body to The Ithacan and The Cayugan, will also be available to hear questions or concerns about the publications. The m~eting will be at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, April 3, in room 220 of Roy H. Park Hall. Questions? Contact J. Michael Serino, Manager of Student Publications, at 2 74-1036. r ,.

Check out more comics Thursday March 23, 2000 Read local cartoonist Eddie Domaingue's "IC" Page 24 on the Classified page.

DILBERT BY SCOTT ADA,\1S RUBES BY LEICH RUBIN

E ______....., ,.-::======~====::=:::---, By Leigh Rubin AS REQUESTED. I ~ i ... UNLESS YOU SAY : A FUTURE VERSION f ~ ,, ... CAME UP WITH A SOMETHING NOW ~ OF ME WILL ARRIVE ! PLAN FOR DOING THAT MAKES ME ~j VII\ TIME MI\CHINE "' MORE WORK WITH i UNMOTIVATED. I FEWER PEOPLE. • TO HELP ON THE ... E 0u if I t: l I I \ I ~ if I ~....L:L______Ji .___ __...... ,;a~~ ff! I AM YOU FROM HOW STICK A THE FUTURE. YOUR DOES MY FINGER TIME MACHINE HEAD IN THIS INVENTION WORKS. GET LIKE HOLE. THAT?

"There I was, swimming peacefully In the pond, when auddenly, some kid scoops me up and stuffs me In his pocket. The next thing I know, I'm dumped In with the laundry. Why, H that Maytag hadn't been .; on the cold cycle I'd have been a goner!" A FUTURE ME BUilT HELLO, YOU E YOU ALWAYS A TIME MACHINE MISERABLE ;;! GOT BAD AND CAME TO HELP ;. ASSIGNMENTS By Leigh Rubin PILE OF SOLID "' ON MY PROJECT. SEWERAGE. .;; AFTER TODAY. ;;...... ! c ::, 0 g C N g

r-:::::::======---,er-::::======::--,.;------/\LICE, THIS IS ~ AT THE NEXT E IS NO, BUT ME FROM THE HOLIDAY PARTY, ~ ! TH/\T AFTER TODAY FUTURE. SHE'5 ALL OVER ! I TRUE? SHE NEVER i YOU. I DRANK .. AGAIN. i C ::, 0 :;:0 g ~~Inc.--­ --=-,,.2,'1 ¾ "How can you possibly fire me for being .. late to work? Time hasn't even been ~-~i:;,__~:.._...i..:~.u..un L.-l...-U.-~...r..:ii.....1------1 Invented yeti"

E 0 .; C I KNOW EVERY ~ 0 By Leigh Rubin m TRAGEDY THAT © \-\e.RE 111 WILL HAPPEN IN .,~ 'C., ::: 11 col'\ES··· 0 YOUR FUTURE . u m \I/

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I MU5T RETURN ~ THEY YOU'LL C ... 50 YOU COULD TO THE FUTURE i DON'T MAKE IT ! B055 AROUND THE NOW, YOUR ~ CALL ME RETRO- ~ TIME TRAVELERS. MAJESTY. j MAJESTY, ACTIVE... ~ YET. : IN THAT ; CASE, DANCE c ::, FOR ME. 0 0 0 "'g

0 -s....-...____0 "This Is .G frustrating! It's beyond me --~--.1,_...... 1.,;,..___..J,__,;;;- ______1..,.u..J,.U..--' how anyone can get the hang of these thrngsl" I' I ,I, , L, ) ! To place a classified Thursday Please contact Maria The Ithacan • e March 23, 2000 Stavropoulos, classified f d Page 25 manager, at 274-1618. ,a~,I 1e ·, En1ployn1ent Travel IC BY EDDIE DOMAINGUE

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Come See Everyone's Favorite Trio ...

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..

BEN FOLDS FIVE- Sunday, April 16, 2000 7:30 p.m. Ithaca College Ben Light Gymnasium Tickets on Sale Now w/lC ID, at the Ithaca College Campus Center (Check Cashing Window) Available to the General Public March 28 at Rebop Records, Soundsfine, and Ticketmaster (607) 722-7272 $10 with IC ID, $12 without For More Information, call: (607) 274-1621 Brought to you by the Ithaca College Bureau of Concerts Co-Sponsored by the Student Activities Board *Surcharge may be added at off-campus locations No Cameras, recording devices or alcohol permitted

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·,: ______. Did y~ow... Thursday Freshmanlficjflayer and The lthac()n t March 23, 2000 sophomore~am Griffo recorded h~cks for the ".,/ ~ , < Page 27 . ' men's lac~e team. .;;,o-r·' ' . s Going,going,GONE .. Softball slugger on pace for NCAA lwme run record ~·house BY JOHN DAVIS home Wednesday. Assistant Sports Editor Her power surge on the college scene may come as a sur­ Career Average prise lo some. Hallie Cohen, !>Oftball head coach at William 1. Jeanine Bleau (1993-94) .451 Perhaps nothing in sports captures a nation like the home run. Back Patterson, told Remia that she was not good enough to play 2. Laura Remia ( 1998-present) • .399 in the 1970s, the nation watched in awe as Hank Aaron chased Babe on her learn before she enrolled at Ithaca. Remia (1998-2001) .408 Ruth's home run record of 714 career long balls. This fascination "I wasn't really recruited by anybody," Remia said. climaxed April 8, 1974, when Aaron finally caught Ruth with a shot "My parents always like to point that out. The William Career Runs 1. Cheryl Wah (1996-99) 130 played over and over again on highlight reels for years after. Patterson coach actually told me, 'I really don't think 6. Laura Remia (1998-present) 90 .·\ Our generation missed the excitement of Aaron's assault on the you could do anything for our team."' Remia (1998-2001) 154 record books, but two years ago we were able to witness Mark McG­ The Hewitt, N. J., native said she is glad she even­ wire and Sammy Sosa's chase of Roger Maris' mark of 61 home runs. tually chose Ithaca. Career Hits Ithaca College should get prepared for a home run chase of its "I love it here," Remia said with a smile. "I love 1. Cheryl Wah (1996-99) 174 own. Junior first baseman Laura Remia has 29 career home runs. She all the friends I've made, my team, the campus, 7. Laura Remia {1998-present) 113 broke the Ithaca College record of seven her freshman year with I 0. and I love being able to walk across campus and Remia (1998-2001) 204 Remia finished her sophomore season on pace to hit 50 long balls, see the lake. Our field is the best field in Di­ eclipsing the NCAA Div. III mark of 44 set by the College of New vision Ill. I just can't say enough about Itha­ Career RBIs Jersey's Michelle Carlson in 1995. ca." 1. Laura Remia (1998-present) 99

"She has a great bat and she has quick hands," senior tri-captain Her career began with a bang - a bang Remia (1998-2001) 182 ,) Vanessa Montorsi said. "If you see her, her swing is so fast and pow­ of the bat. Her first collegiate hit was a home erful. How she cuts down on the ball and it just flies off is amaz­ run, the first of a Division III record IO by '~~~~eer Home Runs _,"': ing." a freshman. ~~·'\l.ii_ura Remia (1998-present) ?,.9 The second baseman went on to say.she has not seen anyone that "My freshman year I was pretty sur­ ~'Remia (1998-2001) ~ is as good at the plate as Remia, except for players at Division I Cor­ prised," Remia said. "Going into my Projections after sophomore year ,'i?italics nell. sophomore year I thought,'lt's going to Fans and media may become obsessed with the "home run chase be different. I'm not going to hit IO hbme of 200 I" next spring, but Remia is not. runs.' The more I play, the more teams "I don't want to think about it," the first baseman said. "I'm on know what I can hit. But the more I play, the field to be with my team. If I hit a home run, it's another run. the better I become. I'm learning to not It's not a big deal to me. When I'm up to bat, I'm thinking line dri­ just hit the low-outside pitch, but also ves up the middle." the inside pitch." Remia hit one home run in IO games down South, a slow start Last year's I 5 home runs placed her for the slugger, but she said she remains optimistic that she will re­ second in the nation, but she said be­ gain her swing. ing the top slugger in the nation is not "I had a rough ~~k down in Florida, so when I qune back it '!Va5- n't ,- ,,,~, :·~:-.-- ~ · ·>~- -.-:~ , - ,~ · , ' ,· , ·" -~· anl but,'

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ALAN DEITCH/ THE ITHACAN JUNIOR FIRST BASEMAN LAURA REMIA lead the Bombers with a .441 average, 49 runs, 49 runs batted in, five triples, 15 home runs and 19 walks In 1999. She has a career .399 average, 90 runs, 99 runs batted in and 29 home runs. 28 THE ITHACAN THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 2000 lPress Remia slugs for NCM homer record tsox Continued from page 27

CHRIS her main goal. O'CONNELL "I don't know if [hitting 15 home runs] can happen again," she said. Sports Her goal this year is to get hack to the Col­ Columnist lege World Series, where the team was knocked out last year short of a national cham­ pionship. Stepping back Even though the team struggled in the World Series, she said it played great in the regional to look at life final a weekend earlier. I like to think of myself as an "The regional final was probably the best optimist. I try to move on after game I've played in my life," slie said "We something bad happens and learn were home and it was graduation weekend, from my mistake. so everyone was happy. I got up to the field But there is one decision I and there was a beautiful blue sky and a ton made that no matter what of people. We were fired up and played great perspective I put it in, no matter as a team." what I try to extract from the She said even though her mother likes to say situation, 11 still appears that I she taught her how to play, her dad was the one dropped the ball. who put the glove in her hand. A while back my girlfriend of "My dad's hecn my coach ever since I was nearly a year and I broke up. 111111.!," she said. "He was the one throwing wif­ Something inside of me grew tle balls at me when I was 5. Both my parents complacent. I can attribute most are the most supportive people. They drive to of the problems we had to this llhaca for the day every time we have a game feeling, and it still bothers me that just to see me play. I owe everything to them." I did not sec then what I sec now. Her father, William Remia, said she has dis­ But at this point, there 1s nothing I played power ever since she picked up a bat. can do. "One day we were throwing a ball, and the I have realized that this kid next door came over," he said. "He was ex­ complacency has saturated our cited about baseball and asked me to pitch to lives. As more and more teams him. I started pitching and then she said, 'dad­ arc hooted from the NCAA dy let me try it.' So I lobbed one and she re­ tournament, and we get ever ally hit it. I asked if she could do it again, and closer to crowning a champion, she did." so many of us have become However, Remia does not just hit home runs. absorbed with college basketball. She is second in career batting average"at Itha­ Many people, myself included, ca with a .399 average. She broke the record spent more time and effort filling for most career runs batted in Wednesday out our brackc"ts than we would against Elmira and is on pace to break the ever donate to our schoolwork. record for career runs next season. Maybe that is OK; after all, we Barring an unforeseen event, Remia arc not all model students. should leave her name all over the Bomber ALE PHOTO/ n-tE ITHACAN But that docs not make it right. record books with numbers not to be seen again PLAYERS AND COACHES describe Remla as a great leader, teammate, hitter and friend. Where we as people generally do for many years to come. She may graduate Ithaca as the best hitter to ever grace Kostrlnsky Flel~. not do well is in our interaction with each other. Sure it is most blatant at times like now, when March Madness seems like a legitimate disease that keeps us away from school (and sometimes reality), but it is /j~t love you guys - youjixed everything •.. I bought this car al prevalent at all times. And sports 75K and it was like new-now. 3 are not the only culprit; we may yean later, ff IS EVEN BE7TER 1 have to look within to diagnose you said II would be like a new car and you are totally correct. others. -Jim What makes us grow apathetic? Why do we push away some of the people who are closest to us? Many times we lose sight of what we have. We no longer see the people close to us as valuable parts of our lives, but as people playing a role. Many times we will focus on other's shortcomings rather than appreciate just how much they mean to us. We need to shift this mindset. I had everything I ever wanted in my previous relationship, but I was so caught up with the little things that I truly failed to notice I had found a diamond in the rough. So before you return your attention to March Madness, remember there will always be some tournament or play-off or big game - it is the nature of sports today and the publicity surrounding them. Do not get too caught up in these events and let life pass you by. The time we spend with each other is invaluable. We just have to learn to recognize that better. So take a look at what you have. Take some time to truly appreciate it. If I have learned anything in the last few months, it ii, to recognize when I have a winning lottery ticket and not to throw it away.

Chris O'Connell is a junior television-radio major. • THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 2000 THE ITHACAN 29 Bombers turn tricks to defeat Alfred BY DAN ABBOTT Staff Writer

While the men played arch-rival Nai.areth yesterday, the women's lacrosse team (2-2) squared off against another purple-clad foe in Alfred. The women had better success than the men, defeating the Saxons, 13-6. After losing two road games by one point in the last week, the Bombers took control early and set the flow of the game the rest of the way. Head coach Piep van Heuven said getting' a home win was important. "We set a goal yesterday in practice to go undefeated on our home field, so today was a nice start," van Hcuvcn said. "We needed a New York State win, and I thought we played well." Ithaca built up an 8-3 lead at halftime, but Alfred scored three consecutive goals early in the second half to close the lead to two. The Bombers responded by scoring the last four goals of the game. Three Ithaca players netted hat tricks, in­ cluding senior attack Jen Herlihy and junior attacks Jennifer Regan and Kelly Bliss. Se­ nior attack Kim Harrison scored the first two Bomber goals of the game, with the first one assisted by Bliss. "I was just in the right position at the right time," Harrison said. "We see each other real­ ly well on the field, and we feed off each oth­ er really great. I was right in front of the goal, and she popped it to me, and I just nailed it in." Junior goaltender Brooke Andrews said midfield play was the key to setting the pace. "It'.s good to get winning again," Andrews said. "I thought that we really picked up in· the midfield especially. [Junior midfielder) Becky Karver was all over the ball everywhere, and that really helped control the midfield for us, and that was what decided the game." . Andrews was solid in goal, making 14 saves on 19 shots. Ithaca-dominated in shots [39-19), ground balls [37-13) and draw controls [8-4). Alfred senior midfielder Lauren D' Aurio and sophomore attack Sheilah Higgins each led Alfred in scoring with two goals. The Bombers have two home games this GARRETT SMITH/THE ITHACAN weekend, including Skidmore on Saturday. FRESHMAN ATTACK CALYN ACEBES (center) dodges Alfred University players Lauren D'Aurlo (10) and Sheilah Higgins (18) In and Oneonta on Sunday. yesterday's ~omber 13-6 victory. The team hosts two games this weekend against Skidmore and Oneonta. Lacrosse team falls Ithaca wins squeaker to Nazareth, 10-12 Star hitter fails BY MEREDITH JORGENSEN the game's end. Staff Writer Both teams fought for the nu­ against Upwood merous ground balls, a cause of It is the Cortaca Jug of men's concern for Long. BY MATT SCHAUF lacrosse. But even with a vocal "We missed some pretty easy Staff Writer crowd and 60-degree weather, the ground balls at some crucial times Bombers' attempt to beat Nazareth and we lost possession," Long said. The third day of spring was in vain Wednesday. Ithaca lost, Senior attack Mike Urgo said the brought with it the first day of I 0-12, on the Upper Terrace Field. team had trouble getting possession spring-like weather and some­ The men's team was up, 3-0, of the ball. thing else to the Ithaca baseball with 8 minutes, 22 seconds left in "We weren't picking up the team. Some ninth-inning heroics. the first quarter. It closed the peri­ ground balls," Urgo said. "We had the With two outs in the game's fi­ od 4-2, but the lead would not last momentum going in the second nal inning and an enemy runner for long. half. But~ in the fonh quarter, they at each base, Bomber sophomore "We started out real strong, real were a little bit more composed." Jake Upwood controlled Mans­ composed in the beginning," senior The game was tied 10-10 going field's Scott Costa, a .464 hitter, defense Nick LeBarge said. "We into the fourth quarter, but getting him to ground to second just had to keep it up all game." Nazareth midfielder Eric Good­ baseman Joe Reynolds to seal the Coach Jeff Long said the early berlet said he was not concerned. I 0-9 Bomber victory. lead was good for the team's con­ "We plan on winning the "[Upwood] did a great job for fidence, but the men let it slip to­ games in the second half," Good­ us," assistant coach John McNally FILE PHOTO/THE ITHACAN ward the end of the game. berlet said. "We had to get a goal said. "He really shut it down." SENIOR FIRST BASEMAN DAVE MELUNI cracks a hit last Nazareth coach Scott Nelson to win the game, so I stuck one." season. The Bombers defeated Mansfield, 10-9 yesterday. The win was the second 1 said he was not overly worried with Golden Flyer Jeff Monroe straight for Ithaca over Mansfield, of it to Shaute being a "bit of a matched Amato's feat, pounding the early lead. stuck another goal two and a half and the second year they went hitter's park," Valesente conced­ his second homer for the season "I was kind of glad when they minutes later bringing the score to down to the wire at Shaute Field. ed that the Mountaineers can hit. and extending the lead to six. got up 4-1 like that so early and 12-10. Neither team was able to get Last season, the Mountaineers Backing up the coach's feelings Defense was another strong [that lead] wasn't in the third the ball to the back of the net for scored a run in the ninth to edge was the fact that Mansfield carried point for the Bombers, which was quarter, because then I would the remainder of the game. till: visiting Bombers, 6-5, April 15, a .373 team average and 16 home · somewhat of a worry when the have been panicking," Nelson Ithaca has been playing before the 9-0 spanking the Blue runs into Wednesday's game, in­ team returned from Florida. said. Nazareth since 1990 and has yet to and Gold administered in Ithaca. cluding 6 individuals over .400. "We had to get outside and The Golden Flyers dominated be triumphant. This time, the nail-biter went The Bombers did plenty of their work on our spacing and the second quarter scoring four Urgo praised senior goalie Ithaca's way. own hitting on this day though, things," senior captain and first straight goals in four minutes. Marc Pascal, whose brother Adam Before the game, head coach highlighted by a six-run sixth. In baseman Dave Meluni said. Nazareth went on a five-goal scor­ is Nazareth's assistant coach, and George Valesente knew the that inning, junior outfielder Ron The Bombers appear to have ing spree surpassing Ithaca's four the rest of the Bomber defense. Mansfield team would hit. Amato stepped to the plate with straightened things out as the in­ as the quarter ended. The Blue and "I think we have the best 'They've put up some prodi­ two on and whacked his second fielders turned five double plays Gold were one goal up (8-7) going goalie in the country," Urgo said. gious offensive numbers in the home run of the season to put the in the Mansfield game. into the second half. Freshman mid­ "Our defense is probably the best past," he said, a day before the Bombers up, 8-3. The next batter, Ithaca hosts St. John Fisher on fielder Dennis Juleff supplied it has been since I have been here." game. While he attributed some senior third baseman Tony Farago. Saturday in the home opener. three of the first-half goals and The Bombers will travel to would put another in the net before Elmira on Saturday. 30 THE ITHACAN THURSDAY, MARLH 23, 2000 Women gun·for sEfcortd national title

BY STAN DOMBROWSKI ECACs, and now we have to take ing in there, but I know we will do Sraff Writer that focus and use it this weekend well as a team," she said. "When I on states," sophomore Pam Gar­ was in high school we competed All roads lead to Springfield. roway said. "We're also going to against major competition, and This weekend the gymnastics have fun at the same time." I'm taking that and applying it to team heads cast to Massachusetts Fun is something the gymnastics this weekend." • to compete in the National Colle­ team has had a lot of so far this sea­ The team will conduct a light giate Gymnastics Association son. workout today at Springfield before Championship in an attempt to take "This season has been really fun competing on Friday. first place in the most highly for us," coach Rick Suddaby said. "I believe in not working my anticipated meet of the season. The "It's really nice to go in there and team to death and instead allowing championship marks the final show other schools what we can do them to relax," Suddaby said. meet of the season - the team's as a team. We're aiming to finish He said the University of Wis­ last opportunity to end its perfor­ in the top three as a team and arc consin-La Crosse and host mance with an exclamation mark. also looking to place a few people Springfield arc Ithaca's toughest The Blue and Gold enter this in the individual competition por­ competition. event with a lot of momentum af­ tion on Saturday as well." The Bombers last won the na­ ter winning the ECAC Champi­ Freshman Toni Lemon is com­ tional championship two years peting in the individual portion of ago. Who knows, this team could onship two weeks ago. MELISSA THORNLEY/THE ITHACAN spring out of Springfield with an­ "We focused on what we had to the meet. SOPHOMORE CELIA MOORE competes on the balanc, beam Jan. 29. do last week in winning the 'Tm a little nervous about go- other championship. Ithaca tries for its second title in three years Friday and Saturday. Remia sets new RBI mark in victories their offense with a first-inning grand slam by center fielder Se­ Blue and Gold bastio. Freshman designated player sweeps Ebnira Lori Fazio led off the game with in ho,ne opener a ground ball to the shortstop. Freshman Ashley Szalach over­ BY JOHN DAVIS threw the first baseman's head, al­ A.1.11.,·ranr Sports Ed1!or lowing Fazio to reach first safely. Montorsi followed with a walk and "She\ a very good hitter, proh­ after senior Janine Lawler ably one of the he!->t in D III," Elmi­ popped out, Rcmia walked, setting ra coach Rhonda Faunce said the table for Sebastiao's grand about Ithaca fir!->l hascnrnn Laura slam. Rem1a. "It doesn ·1 mailer what you After the grand slam, the thnm at her." South Hill squad struggled to With one out m the first inning take advantage of eight walks giv­ of game 2 against Elmira Wednes­ en up by Elmira freshman Kim day, Rem1a, a junior tn-captam, hit Contant. Fazio grounded out to a l\\'o-run home run on a 3-2 pitch second base with bases loaded in off Elrrnra '.->Cnior Christal Jensen. the first inning and Bimson new The two runs batted 111 gave her 97 out to second base with the sacks for her career and first-place on full an inning later. Ithaca\ all-time list, and lifted the In the fourth inning the Blue and Gold to a 12-0 five-inning Bombers had runners on second and victory over the Soaring Eagles. third with no outs, but once again "I was very surprised," Rcmia failed to score any runs as Contant said. "We've had great, great hitters retired Remia, Furdon and Scbas­ m this program and they've post­ tio in order. ed !->ome great number~." Furdon put an end to the South She said she was lucky to hit the Hill squad's scoring drought with hall out of the park. a blast over the right-field fence in "The count was 3-2, so I knew the sixth inning, helping Ithaca to !>he had to come into the strike a 6-0 win. zone," Remia said. "It really wa!->­ _ LOGAN PRATHER/THE ITHACAN "This is a big win," Rcmia said. n't a good swing at all, I ju~t kind SENIOR SECOND BASEMAN VANESSA MONTOR~I (21) slides into second base while Elmira's Ashley "They are an independent. These of threw my hat on it." Szalach (24) and Regan Martin (7) wait for the ball to be thrown. Ithaca won yesterday 6-0 and 12-0. arc the kinds of teams we arc go­ In the second inning, the slug­ ing to have to play and win to get ger stepped to the plate with one Sophomore catcher Kristin ning, freshman pitcher Rachel end. Our pitching was OK, good into the playoffs." runner on and belted her second Furdon followed with a single, Meth finished off her first career enough for today, but not as Ithaca takes this momentum to home run of the game. ~ophomores Kim Scbastiao and shutout, allowing one hit and strong as I wo·uld like it to be." the Montclair Tournament on Fri­ "She grooved it down the mid­ Donna Fisher hit back-to-back walking none. In the first game, senior tri-cap­ day and Saturday before returning dle," ~aid Remia, who ha~ 99 runs douhles and sophomore Mairin "Their hitters wcrcn 't real tain Robin Bimson threw seven home for double headers against balled in and 29 home runs in her Dudek singled to complete the sec­ strong after hitter six," Ithaca scoreless innings, allowing four hits Rensselaer on Monday at 3 p.m. career. "It was JUst an easy ond straight five-run inning. coach Deb Pallozzi said. "We'll for the complete-game victory. and Binghamton on Wednesday at !->Wlllg." Leading 12-0 after the third in- face much better hitters this week- The Bombers received most of 2 p.m.

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By the Numbers Compiled by John Davis Scoreboard Ju"t Short Athlete of the Week I Baseball (6-5) Women's lacrosse Nick Mayer Ithaca at Nazareth Wednesday, March 22 Men's lacrosse • Hhaca def. Mansfield, 10-9 March 18 Men's lacrosae (2-1) After scoring two goals in his first collegiate lacrosse game, Wednesday, March 22 Imn Ht 2rul Brull freshman Nick Mayer recorded his first-career hat trick against • Nazareth def. Hhaca, 12-10 tthaca 6 3 9 U.S. Merchant Marine Academy Saturday. He also tallied two Nazareth 6 4 10 Saturday, March 18 assists in the game. Mayer gave the Bombers the lead less • Hhaca def. Merchant Marine, 9-4 than two minu1es into the game with an unassisted goal. He Women'• lacrosse (2·1) Hhaca Goals-Assists: Kelly Bliss 3-0, Jen Herlihy 2-1, Kim Harrison 2-0, Liz assisted on Ithaca's next goal and then scored his second goal Wednesday, March 22 of the game in the second quarter. He tallied an assist in the • Ithaca def. AHred, 13-6 Raymond 1-0,AmyTumer 1-0. third quarter and completed the hat trick with a goal in the fourth Saturday, March 18 Nazareth g-a: Allison Roberts 3-1, Maya Lambiase Jaclyn Lombardi 2-0, • Nazareth def. Hhaca, 10-9 2-1, quarter. He now has five goals and three assists to give him Softbllll·(1G-3) Lorra Podsiadlo2-0, Colleen Auck 1-0, eight points in two career games. Mayer is from Old Field. Fanning Wednesday, March 22 Ellen 0-1. Shots: Ithaca 15, Nazareth 27 • Hhaca def. Elmira, 12-0 Goalies: Brooke Andrews {I) 18, Teryn • Hhaca,def. Elmira, 6-0 . Wineburg (N) 9 Head of the Class Falling Ground Balls: Ithaca 33, Nazareth 28 Baseball BTN un,bers Draw Controls: Ithaca 12, Nazareth 9 Gymnastics National Colleglate Gymnastics American Baseball Coaches' Association Division Ill Team Rankings Association/Collegiate Baseball NCAA 44 Division Ill softball record for Division Ill Poll career home runs. Shellacking _ March 13 March20

29 Home runs hit by junior softball Men's lacrosse NQ..IHm. ~ fi2.!Hm ~ .eit.. Pvs. player Laura Remia in her career. Merchant Marine at Ithaca 1. Hhaca 145.6875 1. Marietta (Ohio) 14-1 225 1 219 16 Mar.18 2. Wis.-La Crosse 145.5225 2. E. Connecticu1 St. 5-0 7 Ithaca's previous career record for 3. Springfield (Mass.) 144.7900 3. Wis.-Oshkosh 5-1 216 4 home runs. 4. Hamline (Minn.) 143.4700 4. C~(WIS.) 9-1 214 10 111 2ml 3rd §.lb 8.nDl I.um 5. Ursinus (Pa.) 143.4075 Virginia Wesleyan 17-1 214 17 USMMA 1 0 2 1 4 Dallas 207 NA 4 Home runs hit by the softball team 6. Cortland 143.0575 6. (Texas) 17-3 Wednesday against Elmira. Hhaca 1 3 3 2 9 7. College of N.J. 4-0 192 8 7. Gustavus Adolphus (Minn.) 142.7125 8. Cortland 7-2 187 12 3 Hat tricks recorded in the men's Merchant Marine Goals-Assists: Phil 8. Wis.-Oshkosh 142.1250 9. Forum (Va.) 18-1 183 NA lacrosse game between Ithaca Eggo 3-0, Frank Zingales 1-0, George 9. MIT 141.8063 10. Chapman (Calif.) 13-2-1 162 3 and Merchant Marine Saturday. O'Connor0-1. 10. Rhode Island College 139.0688 11. Ohio Wesleyan 10-3 155 15 12. Emory (Ga.) 20-4 128 NA Hhaca Nick Mayer 3-2, Sam Griffo 3- g-a: 13. Southern Maine 0-0 121 4 They Said It 0, Eric Boniheim 1-0, Erik Wytenus 1- Riding their Tail 14. Kean (N.J.) 9-1 105 NA 0, MoJemal 0-1. · 15. Augustana(III.) 7-1 104 19 "I wasn't really recruited by anybody," Shots: Merchant Marine 25, Ithaca 56 Baseball 16. Anderson (Ind.) 9·1 99 NA Remla said. "My parents always like to Goalies: Morgan Ames (USMMA) 25, American Baseball Coaches' 17. Bridgewater (Va.) 13-2 84 23 point that out. The WIiiiam Patterson Marc Pascal (I) 11 Assoclatlon/Colleglate Baseball New 18. St. Thomas (Minn.) 1-1 82 5 coach actually told me, 'I really don't Ground Balls: Merchant Marine 21, Ithaca York Region Poll 19. Westminster (Mo.)13-2 75 NR think Y.OU could do anything for our 35 March20 20. George Fox (Ore.) 1-1 74 NR team." Clears: Merchant Marine 21 of 36; Ithaca 21. St. Scholas. (Minn.)3-1 72 NA -junior softball player Laura Remia, who 160123 N2.lfflm Record 22. Cal Lutheran 14-5-2 67 9 is on pace to set the NCAA Division Ill 1. Cortland 7-2 23. N.C. Wesleyan 10-5 63 2 softball record for career home runs and Extra-Man Scoring: Merchant Marine 1 of 2. Ithaca 5-5 24. Gettysburg (Pa.) 8·1-1 62 NR Ithaca records for career hits, runs and 6; Ithaca o of 6 3. Rensselaer 6-3 25. Ithaca 5-5 58 18 runs batted in. She is also on pace to finish Face-Offs: Merchant Marine 6 of 16; 4. Oneonta 6-4 26. Trinity (Conn.) 0-0 54 NA second in batting average. Ithaca 10 of 16 5. RIT 5-3 27. Wooster (Ohio) 10·3 46 25

three-time Empire Eight All-Star. Britton is the 11th Bomber to earn All­ Snortt America honors and the first since Steve Dunham '94 was an honorable mention ~nors selection to the NABC team in 1994. Britton named All-American Kelley outboxes competition Senior guard Pat Britton was named a Senior Scott Kelley defeated Omar first-team All-American by the National Letchman of Syracuse in front of a crowd Association of Basketball Coaches. Britton of 800 at North Street Elementary School . is the first Ithaca men's basketball player to in Geneva Saturday. Kelley, a 1998 New ~ earn first-team All-America honors. York State Golden Glove champion, u Britton led the conference in scoring remained undefeated by using a right jab ..c:~ each of the past two seasons. Britton has and hook in outboxing Letchman in the SP RTS +.-I been named to the d3hoops.com Team of middleweight class. ·- the Year third team and the GTE Academic Kelley and other local amateur boxers All-America third team. He has also been will be competing at the Greater Ithaca chosen as the Empire Eight Player of the Activities Center on March 31. Year, the MVP of the ECAC Upstate New York playoff tournament, a finalist for the Compiled by John Davis ;:')~NLINE Jostens Trophy Team of the Year and a Assistant Sports Editor

baths, fully furnished, balconies, free Services parking available. Call Christina at Does th·e road to CliiiSified 256-9539. Computer Problem? Certified mac + pc tech will fix your Continued from page 25 Three or Four BDRM Non Coin computer problem. Affordable rates. the Final Four Laundry Facility one and half Baths Call: 280-1468 For Rent Parking, Balcony. Call 273-8576. Wanted have you glued Twenty-Two Windows, 2 bedrooms, 205 Prospect St. Apt. House eat-in kitchen, hardwood floors, 3 BOA. Available 8/25 Ask includes major utilities, furnished, for John. Leave message. 1 Female Student Needed in large 4 to the TV? laundry, off street parking. 273-9300. Ask for appointment to see bedroom furnished house. $325/ apt. 272-2967 month plus utilities. June 1, 2000 to Brand New Contemporary, 2 May 28, 2000. Non-smoker pre­ bedroom, 2 baths, eat-in kitchen, Spacious 3 Bedroom Apartment ferred. Off street parking close to IC f\ll yollr love of sports fireplace, off-street parking, walk to on the Commons Heat included, Call 375-2450. campus, $1000/mo. 273-9300. furnished. Available Aug. 1st into action. 272-7441. Exciting Lofts, rustic contemporary Notices designs, stone fireplaces, 1&2 LAKE: 00-01 academic year. 5 bdrm \V1·ite for the sports staff bedroom, include major utilities, walk to furnished, carpeting, appliances, Summer School In Costa Rica­ campus, off-street parking, 273-9300. fireplace, deck. dock Start late August Women in development. June 6-23. of The llhclCcl/7. $1,400+ 277-3370. Earn 3-6 credits.language and In­ • Contemporary three bedroom apt. ternship opportunities $1650+ San­ Desirable downtown location two dra Pallack 844-8211 or blocks from The Commons. Two full [email protected] Send information to The Ithacan, 269 Thursday Park Hall, Ithaca College. For more March 23, 2000 Information, contact Calendar Editors Melissa Fisch and Jill Hughes at Page32 274-3208 or fax 274-1565.

Four-day weather forecast WHAT A MESS TODAY FRIDAY Partly cloudy ~ Partlycloudy

High: 55° -so· ~ H;gh: 55" -60°

SATURDAY SUNDAY

. ~~::~s°f ~~;~~5of High: 55°-60° High: 50°-55° Low: 35°-40° Low: 40°

Forecast issued by the National Weather Service, courtesy of the Northeast Regional Climate Center at .

is;sues and.ask your questions. -,,.5Keynote spe:ake!_r' Is Ronald TODAY ,--:,;' Hampton, a nationally known ·. -., ··speaker on the death penalty. Ed Tech Day 2000 - 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the Emerson Suites and ·:· Cork (featuring Corky Lang, other locations in the Campus drummer from Mountain and JOHN SIGMUND/THE ITHACAN Center. Presentations with author of Mississippi Queen, PATROL OFFICER KEVIN COWl:;N. (left). !IRti!ks to an unidentified Ithaca College student Tuesday equipment such as wireless and members of the Spin around 2 a.m. In J-lot, behind t~~sSafety and SASP officers responded to the area networks, digital photography, _. · ·:~. Doctors) with Romp a Room - after an East Tower r~sfdefl~~,~_!1e lot being sprayed with fire extinguisher foam. distance learning, flat panel TV's;-,. at the Haunt. $10 in advance, $12 MIDI and much more. Sponsored_.:· at the door. bought_{>y March 23 at 274-~00: ·\-:· lro~ble wlt~_1',l'echnology In SPORTS by the Academic Computing and - · .. Christian Rock with "Trace of Agrlculture" - 7':30 p.m. in Softball: Ithaca vs. Binghamton Client Services and The Ithacan. Grace" - free at 6:30 p.m. in Recital Hall, Whalen Center for -2p.m. No charge. SATURDAY Muller Chapel. Music. Martha.Crouch, a speaker Baseball: Ithaca vs. Brockport "Confession: Do We Still Need for the C.P. SnQw Lecture Series, -3p.m. It?"- noon in room 202 of the "Fifty-Hour Marathon" - all day. ~ORTS · _•eioengin·eering. Food: Promise· Men's Lacrosse: Ithaca vc. Center for Health Sciences. A Proceeds benefit the Finger Lakes Baseball: Ithaca_ 'ffil Oswego --- or Peril?· '!Vill speak. Oswego- 4 p.m. brown bag forum, sponsored by ~:: Independence Center. To sponsor noon. Refreshments provided. All are the Cathohc Community. All are .... an hour or hall-hour go to Men's and Women·~ Tennis: , . welcome. COMMUNITY welcome. ' · - http://www.ithaca.edu/radio/vic/ Ithaca at Vassar-:- 1 p.m. Trombone Tro~- 8:15 p.m. Dayton Dance Co. - 8 p.m. at "Failing to Succeed" - 7 p.m. in contract.htm. Women's Lacrosse: Ithaca vs. in Ford Concert Hall. the Proscenium T~eatre, Cornell Park Auditorium. Ithaca College Oneonta - 1 p.m. University. The company will alumnus Viet Gragg '89 is the SPORTS . SPORTS perfo"Jl: "OnJ.~e Wings of Angels," 2000 Visiting Multicultural Fellow. Baseball: Ithaca vs. St. John COMMUNITY Baseball:.ltbaca at Scranton - a trlt:,atEffo1fie .wartime efforts of No charge. ·Fisher - 1 p.m. Grall (Goth/Industrial Night) - 3p.m. the Tuskegee Airmen, "Las Judy Grahn - 7:30 p.m. in Muller . Women's Lacrosse: Ithaca vs. at the Haunt. $2 over 21, $4 Desenamoradas," "Mourners Chapel. The Writing Program's -·Skidmore -1 p.m. under. . COMMUNITY Bench," which reflects on the end Distinguished Visiting Writers · Softball: Ithaca at Montclair -. Dayton Dance Co. - 8 p.m. at of a community destroyed by the Series' special guest. She is a Tournament - TBA. the Prosceniu,ri Theatre, Cornell Klu Klux Klan, and "Sets and poet, author and the literary Men's Lacrosse: Ithaca at MONDAY University. The company will Chasers," a ballet set to the jazz founder of lesbian feminism. She Elmira - 4 p.m. perform: "On the Wings of and swing sounds of Duke will present a poetry reading. All ADVANCED REGISTRATION Angels," a tribute to the wartime Ellington. Tickets are $25 for are welcome. COMMUNITY FOFi' FALL 2000 efforts of the Tuskegee Airmen, students, $30 for adults. For tickets "Agriculture and "Iroquois Women as Models for "Las Desenamoradas," and information, call 254-ARTS. Biotechnology: Battle Royal of the Women's Rights Movement" "The Sounds of Poetry" by "Mourners Bench," which reflects Roots Reggae with The B•slde the 21st Century" - 7:30 p.m. in - 1 p.m. at the DeWitt Historical Robert Pinsky, U.S. Poet on the end of a community Players - at The Haunt. $5. Textor 102. Kristin Dawkins, a Society's Tompkins County Laureate - 7:30 p.m. in 102 destroyed by the Klu Klux Klan, speaker for the C.P. Snow Lecture Museum, 401 E. State St. Textor Hall. Open to the public. and "Sets and Chasers," a ballet Series, "Bioengineering Food: "True North: Photographic set to the jazz and swing sounds THURSDAY Promise or Peril?" will speak. Journey to the Arctic" - 2 p.m. Guest Lecture: John Harbison of Duke Ellington. Tickets are Refreshments provided. All are at the DeWitt Historical Society's - 8:15 p.m. in Ford Concert Hall. $25 for students, $30 for adults. ADVANCED REGISTRATION welcome. Tompkins County Museum, 401 E. The 1999-2000 Karel Husa For tickets and information, call FORFALL2000 Ithaca pell a concert - 8 to 10 State St. Tim Gallagher, editor of Visiting Professor of Composition. 254-ARTS. p.m. in the pub. To kickoff the "Living Bird" magazine, to speak Foundation for Local Music's SPORTS and share his nature photography. SPORTS "FLM Sessions" - 9 p.m. at Women's lacrosse: Ithaca at "Clowning Around" - 2 p.m. at Men's Tennis: Ithaca vs. Elmira Castaways, 413 Taughannock Cortland- 4 p.m. FRIDAY the Sciencenter, 601 First St. -3p.m. Blvd. A weekly jam session 'Frank Towner will "clown around" Softball: Ithaca vs. Rensselaer organized by the Foundation for COMMUNITY Celebration of Service. and explain the history of -3p.m. Local Music. Hard edge, high "Death of a Common Celebration of Service - 9 a.m. clowning. energy jams. No cover. -~ Language" - 8 p.m. at the to 3 p.m. at Egbert Hall lobby and '80s night with DJ Nicky Wood Sector Nine with DJ Anthony Kitchen Theatre Co., 116 N. Phillips Hall, North Foyer. - at the Haunt. $3 over 21 years TUESDAY Garlic - at the Haunt. Cayuga St. Followed by an all-campus old and $5 under 21. The Machine - at the Haunt. A reception from 4 to 5:30 p.m. in the ADVANCED REGISTRATION Pink Floyd Experience. $10. pub. For more information, stop by FOR FALL2000 WEDNESDAY Egbert Hall March 23, or go to SUNDAY www.ithaca.edu/dayofservice. "From Golden Rice to ADVANCED REGISTRATION Not all Ithaca College events "Fifty-Hour Marathon" - 4 p.m. "Fifty-Hour Marathon" - until 6 Terminator Technology: The FOR FALL 2000 are llsted In the calendar. Friday to 6 p.m. Sunday. p.m. Proceeds benefit the Finger Proceeds benefit the Finger Lakes Lakes Independence Center. To Independence Center. To sponsor sponsor an hour or half-hour go to an hour or half-hour go to http://www.ithaca.edu/radio/vic/co http://www.ithaca.edu/radio/vic/ ntract.htm. You ask the questions. contract.htm. Bach2000 Festival - 4 p.m. Ellen Jewett, violin, and Elizabeth SPORTS Simkin, cello, will play. "w11i111 \,rilt•r I \krill \,ill l>t· 1.dki11,: t,, th,· l11di::t1 l,i,1-., .1 \\l·t·k ht·li>1l' Softball: Ithaca at Montclair "An Evening at the Pops" - 7 tlwir .\pril 10 11,1h l'tl .ii l ,111wll .111d ,, ., l,i11:~ 1,,, 1v,1dl'r-- i1111lll. "-l·11il Tournament - TBA. p.m. in Emerson Suites. \Olll(!lll'''i1111, ltl j \\t-1ill .1I ,~,·\illll'l .11il_1(1111 !i\ llll',d.11. \l,1!• !: ..''.'. l ' Performance by the Ithaca Ill. 1' I It·, j, l I I'• \ \ j l t ', I I \ \ I i 1 , 111 ·- \ \ t • I ', j I 1 I ii COMMUNITY College Symphonic Band. Tickets ,11 --l JI. I IJ I () fl 111 'I f 11 , pp i I ii '· • \ p i I "Let's Talk About the Death are $17.50 and include a j,,tw I it' / /71, 1/fi.1< .If/ Penalty" - 7:30 p.m. at the reception with hors d'oeuvres, a Southside Community Center, 305 dessert buffet and sparkling ltll l1' 1 lll'il1t;11111,1l111l\,t,l\\ _,_-_. \1,)1,. S. Plain St. A forum to hear the waters at 6 p.m. Tickets must be

~- The Ithacan Your guide March 23, 2000 to today's events Page 1S SPECIAL SECTION Students, Faculty and Staff -Stop By! It's Free!

1 Academic Computing 1

: & I Client Services Olficr of lnlormdlJOn Technology· llhdc dCollege l ------

y' Presents *Sec dcr,11 Is on b.ick r.ige

• 10th Anniversary •

EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGY DAY AT ITHACA COLLEGE Thursday, March 23rd • www.ithaca.edu/edtechday Today! Thursday, March 23rd 9am -4pm • Emerson Suites, Campus Center

Aarwin Computers • Adobe Systems • All-Mode Communications • Apple Computer • Applied Theory Corporation • Audio Video Corp. • Bell Atlantic • Brown, Pinnisi and Michaels• Business Methods, Inc.• CABLExpress Technologies• Canon USA• CellularOne • Chester Technical Services, Inc. • Cisco Systems, Inc. • Clarity Connect• Compaq Computer Corporation • The Computing Center• Continuous Solutions Group • CS Business Systems, Inc. • Custom Computer Specialists • DDC Publishing • Dell Computer • Educational Technology, Inc. • Finger Lakes Technology Group, Inc. • Francis Audio-Visual Services • Hickey's Music Center• i-drive.com • IKON Office Solutions • Ithaca College Bookstore • IthacaAuction.com • Mascot Network • MindAngle • Oracle • Paetec Communications • Presentation Concepts Corporation • ReQuest Technologies, Inc. • Sherpa Technologies • SmartForce • Telergy • Time Warner Cable • And Others!

Vendor Showcase • College Showcase • Seminars

a-Sponsored by The Ithacan 2S T/ze /1/z11ca11 EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGY DAY SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION March 23, 2LJ()() Anyone for take-out?

I

With che new iBook, ™ everything you need to get onto the Internet is built in. Just plug it in, answer a few simple questions and you can be surfing in ten minutes out of che box. iBook gives you a bright 12.1-inch screen. built-in CD-ROM and a battery chat lasts up to six hours. So come get your hands on a new iBook today. Then che Internet will always be as close as your nearest phone jack.

Shop at www.apple.com/education/score or call l /800-780-5009.

11 OllJ J J Appk Compt.nt.r, Inc All nglu1 n."1.C.rv,:d. 11k' ~>pl"· l<,go u .& rq:,ml'fl.-d ir.uiL,n.uk .2.nd 1Bunk l1 Ji u.1dcnul'k or A11pk Cnmputi:r. In, lniLflK1. .Kc,.-u fl'qlllrt"l l~r. fn"1. nuy .1pply 0.111uy life h.u.L-d on normAI uu~c.

Ithaca Coll

Join us for a tour of some of our computer labs and enhanced classrooms on campus. The SO (IJ minute tour departs from the main registration table in the North Foyer. ~lf5 -':'.fr:~.. --. .. .-_: . ·-.~_",_-:·::' ..· <-r/>_-.-:_.,-··-}

. - ,·

2 System Administrators

Academic Computing and Client Services at Ithaca College is seeking applicants for 2 Systems Administrator positions. Both positions provide development, administration and day-to-day management of enterprise-wide systems running critical College services. The first position focuses on managing servers that provide central e-mail, calendar, directory and library services, and will oversee the migration of our e-mail services from their current OpenVMS platform to Sun Solaris. The second position will focus on managing systems that provide our central Web-based services, directory and related products.

Complete information, including how to apply, is available on our Web site: http://www.ithaca.edu/computing/, may be obtained at our booth in the College Showcase Area during Ed Tech Day or by calling 607-214-3030 ...... -...... ,...... Marci, 23. 2UUO £DUCA TIONAL TEC/-INOLOGY DAY SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION Tl,c /1lu1C w, 3S Educational Technology Day Seminars .

The Seminars at a Glance

Seminars are free and open to all. No signups are necessary,just stop by. See descriptions for details.

Room I 9:00 -9:50 I 10:00 · 10:50 j 11:00 · 11:10 I 11:10 · 12:00 I 12:10 -1:00 I 1:10 -2:00 I· 2:10 -3:00 I 3:10 -4:00

µ New Products AirPon Wireless C: AppleShare and Q) from Apple: Technology: QuickTune 4.1: "'C Desktop MovieS: Apple Network Mac OS X Server: Educational Educational Clark Lounge Apple Computer ti) Apple Computer Assist.ant: Apple Apple Computer ·-Q) Technology Technology Computer a..'"' Associates Associates Q) C) Q) Preparing Your ~ SwrageArea lthacaAuction Swdents for the o m Security and User Klingenslcin Building a Networks: Internet File Presentation: 21st Century: Authentication: Campus Intranet: Compaq Services: i-drive lthacaAuction Cuswm Lounge Mascot Network ~~ Alcatel nJ '"4 Computer .Com Computer -5 0 Specialisrs -"'C ~c:: .0 cu Designing for Save on C: > Networked Video The Migration to Cisco Switch Wireless North Meeting Print and for Q I Networking (/l Solutions: Nortel IP Telephony: Clustering: Technologies: Webi Marcelle ·o Hardware ... : Roam Networks Nortel Networks CABLExpress Clarity Connect Toor Designs s ~ CABLExpress ~sti) • ~~ SmanForce e- SmanForce e- Intellectual a.. ~ Learning Leaming Save on Supporting the Propeny& Weird Patents: Dell Storage . South Meeting End Useri Environment: Environment: Networking Internet: Brown, Brown, Pinnisi &. Solutions: Dell ~~ SmartForce Smarr.Force Room Hardware ... : Aarwin Pinnisi& Michaels Computer ~~ (former~v CBT (fonne, /\- U3 /' CABLExpress Computers Q) Michaels > Sysrerns} .'J'.\'S[t'IIJ.½)

11:30 & 12:30: Lab/E-Classroom Lab/E-Classroom ml Disr.ance Learning Tour - Meet at Tour - Meet at Other u Demonstration: Registration Registration ·-Q) College Table, North Table, North 0.. (/) Showcase Area Foyer Foyer

Seminar Descriptions All seminar descriptions were provided by the presenters.

9:00-9:50 solution for online campus imranet community services including: why it's essential to have a campus intranct; should you select a service provider or purchase software; what arc the privacy, security, and commercial Save on your Networking Hardware Every Time and concerns; and what's the best strategy to keep things affordable. Pre­ Tum Did Equipment Into J\ssets -South Meeting Room sented by Mascot Network. We'll shaw you how you can provide your business with a network and save 10-70%. CABLExpress Technologies offers Equal-To-New equipment Designing for Print and for the Web -North Meeting Room as a solution to your network needs. We'll also help you learn how to get People in offices who have never taken a design course arc designing money back for your old equipment to use towards upgrading your network. newslecters, brochures, logos-materials for print and for the web. The Presented by CABLExpress. function of this seminar 1s to help participants understand the basics of graphic design and the thinking process involved in creating successful designs. The workshop will include slides of contemporary graphic 10:00 - 10:50 designs from well-known designers, overheads of well-designed web sites with URLS, and an exercise on selecting typefaces that arc appropri­ ate to the design job at hand. Presented by Marcelle Toor Designs. Quicklime 4.1- Clark Lounge QuickTime is Apple's powerful cross-platform multimedia architecture. Supporting the End User -South Meeting Room With Quick Time, educators can create media rich interactive experiences Providing support to the end-user in an open, walk-in e11v1ronrnent pre­ for Macintosh and Window's clients. QuickTime 4.1 builds on a solid foun­ sents unique challenges and opporwnities for the computer rechrncian ;:it dation. This "new version enhances QuickTime's Internet streaming, interac­ aarwin Computers. Approaching the challenges with an open r1.nd flexible tive capabiliiies and media handling. With the growing base powerful mindset makes for a win-w111 growth environment that can translate tG Quick Time aware content creation software, educators can create engaging any other aspect of !if e. Prcscmccl by aarw111 Computers. multimedia content for the Internet, CD or DVD. Come and see QuickTime 4.1 in action! Presented by Apple Computer. 11:00 - 11:10 Building J\ Successful Campus Intranet Community -Klingenstein Lounge Special Anniversary Presentation by Ithaca College Today, with the rapid embrace of technology and its impact on campus life and sense of community throughout a college or university, college admirns­ President Peggy Williams -Vendor l\rea trators are looking for new ways to continue to foster a sense of community and keep thriving campus hubs alive. This session will outline key consider­ ations for college administrators in evaluating and selecting the appropriate ' • - ..-_ • • • 'I, • Continued on page 4 4S The lthaca11 EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGY DAY SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION Ma1cl, :!3. :!IHJ/J Seminar Descfiptlons. conUnued from page 3 SANs to create a heterogeneous storage network for Imel servers, Urnx 11:10 - 12:00 (Solaris, AIX, HP/UX, Tru64, Linux) servers as well as proprietary servers. Presented by Compaq Computer Corporation. Desktop Movies -Clark Lounge Networked Video Solutions for Education -North Meeting Room Apple revolutionized computmg with desktop publishing ,n the 1980's and Nortel Networks will present networked video solutions thm can be used to Macintosh. Firewire, Digital Video Cameras clrld Macintosh arc at the support Distance Learning and the storage and retrieval of video contem forefront of the next revolution 111 technology: Desktop Movies. Now creat­ over a school's computer network. Presented by Nortel Networks/ All­ ing high quality video is within reach of every educator. Apple completes Mode Communications. the solution with powerful digital video editing software: iMov,e and Final Cut Pro. Come and discover how you can create movies on your desktop. Smartforce e-Leaming Environment - South Meeting Room Presented by Apple Computer. SmartForce, formerly known as CBT Systems, is the leading provider of computer/web based traming for IT professionals and Microsoft End User~. Storage Area Networks -Klingenstein Lounge This presentation will focus on the components of the new e-Learning One of the hottest trends in the computer industry is to take pnrnary (hard environment announced by SmartForce and how this new environment disk) storage and secondary (tape) storage off the main network and put 1t can be used in curriculum integration, computer competency programs, and onto its own network. Th,s crecJtion of a StorcJge Area Network (SAN) staff development projects. MySmartForce is a dynamic, customizable results in tremendous performance mcreases as well as lowering the total learning environment that combines assessment testmg, personalized cost of ownership for server farms. You will learn the building blocks of learning paths based upon profiling and learning objectives, on-line mencoring, and access to collaborative learning events and resource infor­ mation. Presented by SmartForce (formerly CBT Systems).

12:10-1:00

New Products from Apple -Clark Lounge Apple continues its string of successful products with the brand new Powerbook, iMac, iBook, and Power Macincosh G4. Combined with the powerful, easy to use Mac OS 9, these produces provide unprecedented performance and capabilities. Apple's products lead the industry in price/ performance and ease of use. Come and learn about the products behind Apple's phenomenal success. Presented by Educational Technology Associates. Internet File Services for the Academic Community (i-drivel -Klingenstein Lounge i-drive is an internet hard drive. i-drive is partnering with leading schools around the country co pioneer its Internet file services on campus. Access your files from any computer connected to the Internet, share information with few or may or use Filo™ to gather information from the Web. Come find out how people on campus from students to professors are using i-drive for file storage, web publishing and sharing. Presented by i-drive.com. The Migration to IP Telephony: Methods amidst the Madness -North Meeting Room In this seminar we will explore various migration paths from traditional Thanks to everyone who helped to make this day possible. telephony into the world of IP Telephony. We will look at each solution's With 45 Vendors, 27 Seminars, 7 College Showcase Booths advantages and disadvantages, and look at sample solutions. We will also and over 1,500 people, it takes a lot of work to put on a show touch upon issues that you should consider when designing your data this size. And we couldn't-have done it without the help of network to handle voice and multi-service traffic. Presented Nortel Net­ ~y talented people from across the campus. works/All-Mode Communications.

In particular, we'd like to thank the hard working staff Intellectual Property and the Internet - South Meeting Room . ,m~ers of the' following departments for all of their An introduction to intellectual property (patents, trademarks, copyrights), .,- excelhmt help and support: particularly as it applies to the Internet and the on-line world. Presented by :·: ... ·-.,.·r·:-: Brown, Pinnisi and Michaels. ~tt¥:~"4emic Computing & Client Services d.f ,';; ·t~h~~·r.,.Pamnus . Center . ' Ithaca College Computer Lab and Enhanced Classroom Tours - ,,~:: '~pus Safe& · Meet at the main Registration Desk, North Foyer i:~t'.,cl~g 'and-~g Services X¥1cim"i; ·e Refilncffis'_,_ · · Presented by Academic Computing & Client Services, Ithaca College. IJ'f,~,. ..,..$,--~··>'r•'l"'"'. -- . ''"'r:~·" .-..,,, ~~e~- Event Services ~; -t-z,·~~,~pL:.rt··~:'·-<. - ·)~(f: .._., •r;~:. ~;~~~;-:_;·~,1.,·· • 1:10- 2:00 :~~eI~~al~.c;,~ _ :~~~-The:1thacan :·:., ,. :· - .;ti:.~};.;!//?-::~-:·.;_ :::.. ;r,::::~· :·? ·: .__ . AirPort Wireless Technology - Clark Lounge ~~f\q~fl>J ,co~ J9.e_ f~~~c Student Crew who makes every- Apple Computer recently introduced AirPort wireless products based on ,::,~· ·:run smooth! 1· ·.·· · ~·--· '' _,\2_ . -, .,."1 ; ... ," - ...... "· .,,, ~ •••y . the cross-platfrom 802.llb wireless standard. This exciting new technology ..... ,:,..-,, .. w~,f, 4 ,, .... 5~~~~~~-~~r~~~ ~~.'--~: -~¥:·.-·;·: ...... ;· allows users to create wireless LANs and connect without wires co the \4)p~~~-~:you_ t~ Au~o Video Corporation for provid­ Internet at Ethernet speeds. Apple equips every new Macintosh with i i!ig ,clll!,~f.·~~-P;X9jectjon equipment for the seminars. antennas and the capability to accept the inexpensive AirPort wireless card. Apple's AirPort Base Station supports multiple wireless clients. AirPort wireless technology provides new possibilities for mobile class­ rooms, wireless libraries and bringing the Internet co areas where wires l!.it~II '. ~ .. ConUnued on page 5 March 23, 2000 EDUCATIONAL TECIINOLOGY DAY SPF.CIAL ADVERTISING SECTION The lrhau111 5S

can't go. Corne and learn how A1rPon wireless technology lets you get ,md collahorc1tion tools for i11structionc1l technology e11v11onrnents. Com­ onlinc without wires. Presented by Educauonal Technoloqy Ac;soc1atc"-;. lH11ed, thcs!' toolc; provide an ideal platform for dcployirHJ ed11ec1t1or1al lc1bs. Corne and <-.cc thcc.;c povvcrftil tools for computer lab r11c1r1a~Jcrm•r1t ;:ind lthacaAuction.Com -Klingenstein Lounge 111strnct1or1111 acuon. Prc'>cntcd b_v 1\pple Computer. lthacaAuct1on.com enables rnerchams .-iml co11s11rnerc; to buy and sell tlic11 personal property, business qoods, t1nd services in their home cmrn11un1ty Security and User Authentication Seminar -Klingenstein Lounge via a locally-focused Auction Commerce site. We help small bw.,messes tn Sec a User Authcm1cat1011 Derno. I ,earn how Alcatcl 1s addresc.;imJ Sccu­

be open 24 hours i1 dc1y, sell excess inventory, kick off promouons with c1 nt_\' iss11cs for rec1l network<-. with 1mbedded Firewall<-., VPNs, c1r1d with bang, increase foot traffic and Internet traffic, and get unlimited '\,helf l Jc;cr Authentication. Alc;o learn how Alcatel 1s solv111q the Single l hl'r space". Attend our presentation and lec1rn more c1bout your locc1l <1uc:t1011 Loq-on challenge with indu<-.try stcmdard tcchnolo~)lf~c; c1nd pr.-icuu•<-;. site. Presented by IthacaAuction.Com. R cg1stcr to win a Security Audit - details at booth. Pr r•..,cmcd by Alcatcl. Cisco Switch Clustering, Making a Save on your Networking Hardware Every Time and Network Managers Job Easier - North Meeting Room Turn Did Equipment Into Assets -North Meeting Room We'll teach you how to manage an entire group of Cisco switches from a We'll show you how you can provide your business with a nctvvork and single IP address regardless of their location, using one Web interface. "'ave 10-70'X,. CABLExprcss Technologies offers Eq11al-To-Ncvv equip­ This is a very powerful message to network managers that now don't rncrn c1s a solut1or1 to yam network needs. We'll c1lso help you learn how have to manage each individual switch as an independent entity. Pre­ to get money back for your old equiprnent to use towards upgrading your sented by CABLExpress. network. Presented by CABLExpress. .... Weird and Wonderful Patents - South Meeting Room Dell Sel'\ler and Storage Solulions - South Meeting Room "It seemed like a good idea at the time" - an introduction to patents, This presentation will cover the current Server and Storage product line. through some of the weirdest (and funniest) inventions ever patented. Learn about our f ucurc product roadmaps and directions for about the next Presented by Brown, Pinnisi and Michaels. year, and scorage concepts such as SAN and NAS- what they are, and how they fie into your existing information structure. We will also discuss server and storage consolidation and how it can benefit IT info structures. 2:10- 3:00 Other copies covered will be clustering and Scalable Enterprise computing. Presented by Dell Computer. AppleShare and Apple Network Assistant -Clark Lounge Ithaca College Computer Lab and Enhanced Classroom Tours - AppleShare is Apple's general purpose, cross-platform server providing Meet at the main Registration Desk, North Foyer file, web, mail, and print services. Educators can use AppleShare for Presented by Academic Computing & Client Services, Ithaca College. setting up collaborative work environments and hosting educational content. Network Assistant software provides management, reporting, Continued on page 6

_._finger Lakes Region's #I Choice or Networking & Communications Welcome to what's next, "neerln "' 1au,ratilt ANs Digital Cable is here! .. Netwtitlpleileatadon,design &support "'lletwMam.lysislopb~Dtion "' ~ analjsis &optimiution .. 2417 &~-aanual contracts Enter the high-tech world of "' Cisco, lficnisaft, llfflll, 3Com, Citrix, ~ Adlran, Linux, Hulti1ech lla i~~- Digital Cable by calling lJ 111m Jtrrtt ,,., 1/T /IJJl 272-3456 IU..Itn,t Tl • I I, IT1#1111 or by visiting our office at 519 West State Stree4 Ithaca ~ TIME WARNER ~CABLE

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Educational Technology Day Clarity Connect is the region's leading provider of Wireless, DSL and Trident"' Internet Access! www .compaq.com/education/ 6S The lthaca11 EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGY DAY SPEC/AL ADVERTISING SECTION March 23. -:!OIJ() 3:10- 4:00 Smartforce e-Leaming Environment -South Meeting Room SrnartForce, formerly known as CBT Systems, is the leading provid~r of computer/web based training for IT professional and Microsoft End Users. Mac OS X Server - Clark Lounge This presentation will focus on the components of the new e-Learnmg Apple's Mac OS X Server is an industrial strength server platfonn. In environment announced by SrnartForce and how this new environment can addition to built-in web and file services, Mac OS X Server includes a be used in curriculum integration, computer competency programs, and staff streaming video server based on Quick Time technology. Educators can development projects. MySmartForce is a dynamic, customizable learnmg use Mac OS X Server and Quick Time streaming to host media rich environment that combines assessment testing, personalized learning paths content streamed across their campus or the Internet. In addition, Mac OS based upon profiling and learning objectives, on-line mentoring, and access X Server can be used to Network Boot Macintosh clients in instructional to collaborative learning events and resou1 ce informmion. Presented b_v computer labs. Using Network Boot technology, an entire lab of SmartForce (formerly CBT Systems). Macintosh computers share a single system image: adding new Macintosh computers to the network is plug-and-play. Come and discover how Mac OS X Server brings innovative new services to your educa­ tional network environment. Presented by Apple Computer. Preparing Your Students for the 21st Century IK-12 focusl - Projection for the seminars was provided by: Klingenstein Lounge Audio Video Corporation Teachers are looking for a simpler way to enhance their existing curricu­ lum with the innovative uses of today's technology. Discover how the Macintosh can help educators prepare students with skills necessary for their success in the future. We'll demonstrate how educators can share information and be productive using Microsoft Office 98 for Macintosh. Special thanks Apple -~omputer for their We will demonstrate some of the features of MS PowerPoint and MS to Word incorporating QuickTime movies, sound bites and Website URL's. contribution towanl th.e. iMac Computer and We will briefly discuss how the Apple Works Fundamentals and Internet Fundamentals make it easier to incorporate technology into your curricu­ Microsoft for the d.un-on of their products lum. Presented by Custom Computer Specialist.s. -'AJor our raffle •. ,.. :,··i=:· _ ~r, ' ·. -~·:~ .- ,r·:-~J ... .-.-1,ri>·- Wireless Technologies Seminar - North Meeting Room The seminar will provide attendees with an understanding of wireless LAN and WAN technologies. Attendees will obtain a basic understand­ ing of how microwave radios work to deliver high speed data access. The seminar will specifically focus on frequency hopping and direct sequenc­ ing spread spectrum technologies. You will also be shown how to select the bes.t product for your application, whether designing a wireless LAN or WAN, and how Clarity Connect is currently providing wireless Inter­ net access services. Presented by Clarity Connect.

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• 10th Anniversary • Thursday Ed Tech Dav 2000 9am to 4pm EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGY DAY AT ITHACA COLLEGE March 23rd Thursday, March 23rd • www.ithaca.edu/edtechday Campus Center

,._I _ 1___.I QJ QJ Elevator (to 3rd fklOr) 19 30 8 Rest El Rooms BBO!J Technology Showcase Campus Center - Emerson Suites I 33 II 34 I ~[JOI 22 II 23 I I 24 II 25 I 8 El To Seminars 37 (Oark & Kllngensteln I II~ Lounges, North & South ITJ I ,o lr:7 Mffflng Rooms) .I.... _ 1_1 ______.I IJ!J ~ I! 0 ~ i ,--- .. - "' North Fo yer 1i - :E 27 28 29 39 ...I D 14 15 Elevator II I (to lll'Ollld D B floor) D I Registralfo n Desk 8 ~ ~!::! College Showcase Area

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Vendor Showcase 10 Year Participants 36 Cellular011e 30 Apple Computer 33 Chester Technical Services, Inc. 3 Sherpa Technolog1cs 24 Cisco Systems, Inc. 12 Clancy Connect 9 Year Participant 23 Compaq Computer Corporauon 22 The Cornputmg Center 14 Francis Audio-Visual Services 16 Continuous Solutions Croup 32 CS Business Systems, Inc. 8 Year Participant I Custom Computer Specialists 20 Hickey's Music Cemer 18 DOC Pubhshmg 5 Educauonal Technology, Inc. 6 Year Participant 25 Finger Lakes Technology Croup, Inc. 40 Dell Computer 10 1-dnve.com 11 IKON Office Soluuons 5 and Under 21 lthacaAuction.corn 2 Aarw1n Computers 13 Mascot Network 38 Adobe Systems 7 M111dAngle 31 Alcatel lmernetwork1ng 34 Oracle 6 All-Mode Comrnurncat1011s 35 Paetec Cornrnunicallons 27 Applied Theory Corporation 39 Presentation Concepts Corporation Visit the College Showcase 29 Audio Video Corp 9 ReQuest Technolog1es, Inc. 15 £3ell Atlanuc 26 SmartForce (formerly CBT Systems) 8 £3rown, Pinrns1 and Michaels 19 Telergy 4 Busmess Methods, Inc. 17 Time Warner Cable between 9am and 4pm on 37 CA£3LExpress Technologies 28 Canon USA Educational Technology Day and College Showcase Other Art Department North Fo~Br: register to win an iMac Computer. Registration Desk - people Enrollrnem Services for from off­ campus. The lthac.1 CollC'ge community Ithaca C:olle~Je Flookswre does nm need to req1ster and may qo mJl!t Office of lnfonnauon Technolog_y 111. Free! - Acad,!m1c Computmg & Clit!lll Service-. - Adr111r11-.trauve Sy!-.tern,, -Tec__hrm.al Services College Showcase Area: 'Drawing open to Ed Tech Day 2000 attendees Must submit entry at 1Mac drawing booth in the College Showcase Phyc,a:al Plant WVBR & Lite 97 Radio Stat11ms Area between 9am and 4pm or. Ed Tech Day (March 23, 2000) L1m1t one entry per person (mult1ple submissions - Ma1menance/EnPrgy Manc1u1rn,11t will d1squahly you lrom the drawing) No purchase required to enter Ithaca College OIT employees (including - Rt,sourcp and Emnronrnem.al student employees, and 1mmed1ate lam1ly members) and Ed Tech Day Vendors are not eilg1ble All prizes will Ge awarded Drawing will be held by 5pm, Monday March 27 Winner will be not1f1ed by phone Winner 1s responsible Manauemem Program for picking up the computer at the Academic Computing & Client Services office the week of March 27th Physical Therapy Mark your calendars! Speech P.ithology and Aud1olmJy Ed Tech Day 2001 Thursday, March 22, 200l