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The thI acan, 1993-94 The thI acan: 1990/91 to 1999/2000

11-11-1993 The thI acan, 1993-11-11 Ithaca College

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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, 1993-94 by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ IC. Opinion Accent Sports Index IOpinion ...... 1 O Whalen's work Boisterous brothel Running away What's Happening ...... 14 IC's 'Whorehouse' boasts Accent ...... 15 With three years left, (maybe) Mulligan and Mathias lead Classifieds/Comics ...... 18 "JJ" faces money, race issues 10 superb singing, music 16 IC cross country team 21 Sports ...... 21 ,, The ITHACAN The Newspaper For The Ithaca College Community Vol. 61, No. 11 Thursday,-November 11, 1993 28 pages Free Weekend bus program stalls after two weeks was one of two independent may­ "The only way I knew about it Ward said individuals other than By Marnie Eisenstadt oral candidates who ran against in­ "They didn't promote was through the paper [The Ithaca College students showed an Ithacan Staff cumbent Mayor Ben Nichols and it. They should have put Ithacan]," April Bassett '97 said. "I interest in the tokens, but availabil­ Inebriated students who traveled lost. up signs on campus and never saw any signs." ity was restricted to students only. from downtown back to campus for "People aren't taking advantage run an ad in The Marisa Ward, an employee of "We have about 89 tokens [out free may be walking again. of it and not enough kids know Micawber' s on North Aurora Street, of 100] left," shl! said. "People just For the past few weekends, about it. It's not working," said Ithacan." also said she never saw any signs. don't want to take the bus." Ithaca College students who found Baker, who had hoped students -Marisa Ward, "They didn't promote it," she said. "I don't think [people walking themselves in need of a ride back to would be less inclined to walk employee at Micawber' s "They should have put up signs on up South Hill on weekend nights] is campus had the opportunity to re­ through the South Hill neighbor­ campus and run an ad in The Ith­ that big of a problem." quest free bus tokens from area bar hood and disturb residents with loud about it. acan." Breen said students don't want owners. and sometimes illegal behavior. "I was never aware of th~ fact," Downtown bar personnel said to leave the downtown area at 1:30 But this arrangement will no Some said the problem could Marlene Dolt '97 said. very few students requested tokens. a.m. longer be available to students due have resulted from the program's Others heard about it, but knew "I have a whole bunch [of bus Ward said students often go to a to the program's lack of success, lack of publicity. very little. tokens] left," said Bob Breen, bar friend's house or out for pizza after said Beverly Baker, who initiated At the onset of the program, "I heard about it, but I wasn't manager at Plums on North Aurora the bars close, adding that a later the service. Baker '54 is president Baker had said signs would be put sure if it was true or not," Andrew Street. "We only gave [bus tokens] means of transportation might be a of Friends of Ithaca College and up, but some people never heard Philips '96 said. out two times." possible soiution. Office Traditional tu I Off upheaval campus Res. Life, Financial Aid undergo leadership changes denied -- {" ...... ' . . . By Jessica Wing By Rand Otten Ithacan Staff and Liz Gartner For the second year in a row, the Ithacan Staff Office of Residential Life will not Students, staff and faculty will offer an off-campus application pro­ see some new and old faces in dif­ cess for the spring semester, ac­ ferent places as a result of recent cording to Maggie McHugh­ administrative changes in the last Parrish, directorofResidential Life. several weeks. In the past, the policy has al­ On Nov. 29, Rory Rothman will lowed some students to move off become the interim director of the campus in between semesters if the · Office of Residential Life, replac­ College overestimated the number ing current Director Maggie of students leaving for internships, McHugh-Parrish. Rothman will study abroad or graduation. also continue his role as Director of Each year, Residential Life Judicial Affairs, according to Brian projects how many students it will McAree, assistant vice president need to house as compared to how for student affairs and campus life. many beds are available, McHugh "A determination was made that said. The office receives figures Rory was the best person for the from the Office of the Registrar, the job. Rory has a strong background Office of Admissions, the London An avid Bombers' fan displays his enthusiasm Saturday, Nov.6 at the 59th Cortaca Jug game. Center and the L.A. Program. with the Residential Life office and Ithaca crushed Cortland 32-14 to reclaim the Jug In front of 5,815 football fans. works closely with the office in his A smaller freshman class has position with Judicial Affairs," opened more spaces on campus this McAree said. Both offices are lo­ year, McHugh said. cated in the East Tower Lobby. "I think it's okay because the Juggling the two positions may Absestos spurs room change only people it's really kept on cam­ be a problem for a short time, but pus is juniors, so they have the McAree said he is hopeful that the Three students forced to move from Tallcott chance to get off as seniors," said plan will work. Chris Maher '95. "When [students] low warning tape 1cross their door dangerous levels of airborne asbes­ came here, they knew there was a "I feel confident that Rory can By Tom Arundel which read, "Caution, do not en­ tos, Maley said. chance they wouldn't get off cam­ handle both positions," McAree Ithacan Staff said. "The people in Res-Life and ter," and "Authorized personnel "They found that the concentra­ pus because it's a residential col­ Tiny, powder-like particles of only," Dawson said. tion of asbestos was within the ac­ lege." Judicial Affairs will have to take on carcinogenic material flaked away some adjustments during the in­ "At first, we thought it was a ceptable limits," Maley said. "That However, if the College does from a ceiling crack of an Ithaca joke," Dawson said, "But then we means there was no danger." not renew its lease with the Hudson terim time to make both offices College residence hall room, even­ work effectively." read the note from our RA which College officials assured Heights apartments, there will be tually leading to the permanent said not to go into our room and to Dawson and Darrah that their health 290 less beds to fill, McHugh said. Changes continue evacuation of three female students The third floor of the Campus go see·her immediately." was not in danger and gave them "With us becoming a smaller from Tallcott 2 IO. "Once it was known that it [the one night's accommodations in the college, the Heights aren't really Center has also undergone signifi­ Two of the ~tudents, Beth cant changes in recent weeks. material which fell] was, in fact, Ramada Inn, while contractors· re­ needed anymore," said Ken Dawson '97 and Lynn Darrah '97, asbestos, the room had to be sealed moved the material and tested for Bambach '95. "For next year, it'll Larry Chambers, former assis­ first reported the discovery offlakes tant director of Financial Aid, was for their safety," Maley said. "It's a airborne asbestos, Maley said. help more juniors and seniors to get of white particles on the floor of precaution that is under federal The third roommate, Michelle off campus." appointed Acting Director on Oct. their room to their resident-assis­ 16, replacing former Director Jan guidelines." Perfect '97, had left for the week­ McHugh said she continues to tant on Oct. 29, according to Dave The College immediately ar­ Klotz,.wbo resigned last month. end. In addition, the students were caution students about signing Maley, manager of public informa­ ranged for a certified asbestos-re­ Natalie Davy-Euell voluntarily given spending money and offered leases before knowing they have tion. The particles were later deter­ moval contractor to properly patch resigned from her position as assis­ transportation by caµipus safety any been allowed off campus. mined to contain asbestos. the ceiling crack, remove the flakes time and any place, Dawson said. tant director for student employ­ She said she does not expect the Dawson and Darrah returned to from the floor, and test the air in the "They were pretty good about application process for fall 1994 to ment for the Office of F"mancial their room that evening to find yel- See "Upbeaftl," Bat page room and the entire hallway for See "Asbestos," next page be affected. - 2 THE ITHACAN November'U.1993 Upheaval putting my name in the ·hat," he Asbestos--- again and gave the three roommates where the two students now reside. Continued from front page said. continued from front page options as to where they could stay Perfect chose to live in a single. Aid on Friday, Nov. 5, Chambers Although two staff members the whole thing," Dawson said. until further repairs and air-testing "It really became a hassle for us, said. have left in the last month, Cham­ Although the room was ready for were completed. · but it was no one's fault," Dawson bers said the office is still-function­ re-entry the next day> Dawson ·and "After the additional chips fell, said. "It all worked out for the bet­ He would not comment further on the resignation, citing the ing adequately. Darrah did not find ·this out until theairtestscameupnegativeagain,'', ter." "We're College's policy is not to discuss working hard and dili­ they had already booked another Maley said. Maley said the entire Tallcott gently to get things done. When night at the hotel, and thus, stayed Dawson and Darrah opted to stay residence hall was built with asbes­ personnel matters. Financial Aid will fill both posi­ you're down two staff members, it there another night, Dawson said. in Emerson Hall while Perfect tos in the ceilings and walls, as most makesthingsdifficult,"besaid. ''We But the story did not end there. stayed with a friend. During the · buildings were about 30 years ago. tions in the next few months, Cham­ bers said, adding that a nationwide haven't had any student complaints Dawson and Darrah returned to their courseoftheirfour-nightstay away Maley said he does not know any yet. The College is aware of the search to fill the position of direc­ room on Sunday, unaware that just from Tallcott, the students soon other residence halls which may situation and my hope and under­ four days later they would be forced learned the entire ceiling in their have been renovated for asbestos tor has already begun. Chambers said he plans to apply standing is that they [the positions] to move out again, this time for room would need to be replaced removal over the years. However, will be filled as soon as possible." good. On _Nov. 4, they discovered over Thanksgiving Break, and they he said as long as the asbestos is not for the position. "Certainly I will be another crack in the ceiling, about a could not return to Tallcott until the agitated, it is not dangerous. foot away from the original one, work was completed, Dawson said. "If there's no reason to disturb it Collections and more ceiling material which This large-scale job has to be [asbestos], then you leave it alone," • Jeff Shapack's name was mis­ • In an article about the physical had fallen to the floor. done over the break because it is the Maley said. spelled in the caption of the page therapy director's resignation in the ''It looked like baby powder," only time the entire residence hall He added that the ceiling cracks one photo in the Nov. 4 edition. Oct. 21 edition the following facts Dawson said. 'There was a hole can be sealed off, making it safe to in Tallcott 210 were caused by need correction: 1) The neu­ about the size of a quarter round disturb such large amounts of the "wear and tear over the years," • The Counseling Center was roanatomy course Is not new. 2) Dr. and an inch deep." In addition, an­ carcinogenic substance, Maley said. which could have resulted from omitted as a sponsor In the Alco­ Pagliarulo will pursue scholarly ac­ other patch was developing almost In the meantime, Dawson and pounding on the floor above. hol Awareness Week events In tivities In faculty development. 3)The directly above her roommate's bed, Darrah had only limited access to "Other ceilings [in the residence the Oct. 28 edition. Ithaca Planning Unit Is an adminis­ where her bead rests, Dawson said. their room to pick up necessities hall] have been looked at and there's trative unit within one department After reporting their detection until student movers helped them no reason to believe that there are of more ceiling flakes to their RA, To report correctlone, contact The Ithacan news department, either move o•Jt of their abode entirely any other problems elsewhere," Scott Matson or Liz Gartner, at 274-3207, or etop by Park Hall, Rm. 269. the College sealed off the room and into a Lyon Hall apartment, Maley said. -- --

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Choose your topic and start writng. Shabbat* * at·* IC Letters should be typewritten, and less Service on Friday at 6 p.m. - Muller Chapel than 500 words. Letters Dinner at 7:15 p.m. -Terrace Dining Hall should be received at For a free bulletin, call The Ithacan by 5 p.m. Reservations for dinner please! the Mondaybefore 1-800-228-4NYU,ext.102 ~NYUSummer Thursday publication. ~ (274-3103) ~ TWO------CONVENIENT New York University, Office of Summer Sessions Address letters to The S~IONS P.O. Box 242, New York, N.Y. 10117-1335 Ithacan, Roy H. Park May 23-July 1 Please send me a free 1994 Summer Bulletin. School of Communica­ ~ ~ July 5-August 12 tions. * •On-campus housing Free Pizza for as little as $100 Addn!ss------Questions? Call 274- per session 3207. At an open meeting of the Hillel Board •Over 1,000 courses ciij ___ -- - . ------~ i,peoii­ offered This Sunday, November 14 at 4:30 p.m. <~--- ) -----· -- -- . Areaofirii-/' •Open House Muller Chapel- Laub room January 7, I 994 (212) 998-4520 -Yori

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However, health care could be :00 THE SCREENING ROOM-mov:e reviews added to the list if a recent attempt :30 SPECIAL PROGRAMMING by the President and the adminis­ tration succeeds. :00 THE 8 O'CLOCK REPORT-news First lady Hillary Rodham :30 CAMPUS CURRENTS-news form IC and CU Clmton, primary spokesperson for the nation's health care proposal, :00 PANORAMA-arts and entertainment told more than 6.000 people on :30 FREQUENCY-modern rock videos Friday, Nov. 5, that everyone has an opportunity to make history over 0:00 THE 8 O'CLOCK REPORT(REPEAT) the next few months. 0:30 THE NOTHING SPECIAL-comedy "[The decision on the health care rackageJ shouldn't he decided be­ 9C PROGRAMMING SUNDAY- hind closed doors m Washington. Shouldn't be decided by those who ~ THURSDAY have a stake in the current system. --..- ONLY ON ICTV-54 Should be decided by everyone."' Clinton told the crowd in Cornell University's Barton Hall. After the doors closed at 6 p.m. and Clinton began speaking, about 50 people pounded on the doors, frustrated with being locked out. Some members of the angry group were ticket-holders. Clinton detailed the challenges of a universal health care system in a similar tone used by candidate The Ithacan/Dave Slurzberg Bill Clinton during his campaign. Hilary Clinton delivers a health care speech Friday, Nov. 5 to a full Health care coverage must be house at Cornell University's Barton Hall. provided for those people who do the proposal. She now owes $20,000 and said the not have any, Clinton said. "The Clinton spoke of a family wich stress ended her marriage. Iditarod current system is insecure, there $1 million in insurance and a child "Every child deserves fair treat­ needs to be a floor under every­ with Down's syndrome. The fam­ ment," Barrett said. "I don't want Super Boot one," she said. my son to go without a wheelchair." ily depleted all of its funds and ii¾:.~:.-.·.,·: with Gore-Tex The current floor does not pro­ could not get the insurance com­ She said she currently cannot af­ •~- and Thinsulate tect students, but the new proposal pany to grant a renewal. ford quality care because it is too will cover all Americans regardless Clinton cited another incident expensive. of age, Clinton said. when a physician discovered a lump The crowd laughed when Clinton "All of the problems of this coun­ in a woman's breast and would not rhetorically asked everyone to de­ try are solvable," Clinton said. refer her to a radiologist, but would scribe the current system. "There isn't anything wrong with send her to a surgn to have a I~ is the complexity of the sys­ the U.S. that Americans can't fix." complete removal perfonned. tem that concerns Cornell graduate With a universal health care pack­ Ithaca resident Deborah Barrett, student Mark Pierce '94. age, the United States will join the who attended the speech, had her After Clinton's speech, Pierce ranks with other industrialized own story about the hardships she said he feels more comfortable with countries, she said. / suffered when dealing with health the new system, which seems to be Clinton further illustrated the care coverage. less complicated. Pierce said he was many problems with the current "I'm a story myself. I have three insured when he worked for a small system by documenting stories children and had a good job. I gave contracting company, but is no people have told her as she trav­ birth prematurely after eight months longer covered since he has returned elled across the nation promoting and needed coverage," Barrett said. to college. Eurohiker AERho sponsors charity food drive in 5 colors A collection box will be located "This one small act of kindness By Kevin Harlin in the Park School lobby from 10 shows people the College hasn't Ithacan Assistant News Editor a.m to 2 p.m. T-shirts will also be forgotten the town in which we The American Red Cross of sold at the collection table to help live," Hubley said. Tompkins County will get a help­ send members to a national AERho The group decided to solicit food ing hand next week thanks to the convention in March. donations because it felt food would Ithaca College chapter of the Na­ The food will be donated to the be needed dl.!ring the Thanksgiv­ tional Broadcasting Society-Al­ Red Cross Home Shelter and Food ing holiday, Hubley said. pha Epsilon Rho. Pantry on Court Street in Ithaca to However, Hubley was unsure AERho will sponsor a non-per­ feed local needy people, she said. how much food AERho would be ishable food collection beginning The IC chapter supports a na­ able to raise. "I'm hoping to get a today, Nov. 11, and continuing on tional charity for Tourette's Syn­ lot, but I don't expect large 65 styles of guaranteed Friday, Monday and Tuesday, said drome, but decided this year to aid amounts," she said. "But I'd love it Christy Hubley, president of the the local community as well,Hubley if people surprised me and brought waterproof shoes and boots IC chapter. said. in lots and lots of food." in medium and wide widths.

BIJIIT. FREE 'TRIPS! ilELLIT. Student Holidays, the nation's leader in Spring Break ·we pay your BENTIT. vacations, seeking enthusiastic, highly motivated students parking in the FUD IT. and fraternities to be tM Ithaca College reps. EARN lllGHEST COMMISSIONS Dryden Rd. The Ithacan C~ifleds AND TRAVEL FREE! parking ramp. Csll 274-3208 or C3:ncun! Daytona_ Beach! Stop in Park 269 (.\I.I.'\()\\ 1-SOO-JhO-I l{JJ>'. . . November 11, 1993 THE ITHACAN S IC students among those nabbed in A· long, long night: Hudson Street sobriety checkpoint By Kevin Harlin "If you can't take the and WIiiiam Rubenstein hint, then you're always Ithacan Staff Alcohol Impairment Chart going to have to Nearly 175 vehicles met an un­ expected obstacle last Saturday wonder if we're around Approximate Blood Alcohol Percentage night on Hudson Street -- an Ithaca the next comer or over City police sobriety checkpoint. But the next hill. " Drinks Body Weight in Pounds for four Ithaca College students, -Sgt. John M. Curatolo, 160 180 200 220 the night didn't end there. Ithaca Police department Three of the students were ar­ rested on a charge of driving while 1 fil .00 -~ -~ M -~ -~ intoxicated with a blood alcohol Curatolo said. ~..,., content (BAC) of more than 0.10 The area was also selected be­ 2 oa· _._: ·--.~ .... · os os· 04 04 oa os percent. cause it was a safe spot for the 3 : 11 :·, ::_:,:oi/- ·. ·-:Iost: .::o/ .- /:oo:: ·-:06 :: ··:- :os . .· ~os _, A fourth student was charged operation, Curatolo said. It was not with unlawful possession of mari­ located in an area with a blind curve, 4 .15 .12 .1-1 .09- '. ~·os' ::.:.:_:oa'..:'\oi'. juana and consumption of an alco­ over a steep hill, or any other ob­ s .19 .16 .13 .12 .11 -.of .· · .09 holic beverage in a motor vehicle. struction that would cause a driver All of the charges are misde­ to come upon the checkpoint sud­ 6 .23 .19 .16 .14 .13 .11 .10 meanors, said Ithaca City Police denly or without warning. 7 .26 .22 .19 .16 .15 .13 .12 LEGALLY Sgt. John M. Curatolo. The check­ In addition to the four Ithaca INTOXICATED 8 .14 .13 point ran from 11:30 p.m. Satur­ College students, four other people .30 .25 .21 .19 .17 .15 day, to3:30a.m. Sunday.Nov. 6-7. were arrested at the checkpoint, 9 .34 .26 .24 .21 .19 .17 .15 .14 CRIMINAL The three students charged with which is a new operation in Ithaca, PENALITIES '--1_0--.J .38 .31 .27 .23 .21 .19 .17 .16 driving while intoxicated were: Curatolo said. Saturday's check­ Subtract .01% for each 40 m,ns. of drinking. One dnnk Is 1 1/4 ol 80 proof hquor, 12 oz. ol beer, 4 oz of table wine Courtesy: TCSDWI. llhaC81VChrls Gervais • Sophomore Michael T. Kleinhans, point was the third this semester. 19, Hudson Heights apartments Drivers arriving at the check­ •Senior Kelly R. Woods, 21, point were asked a series of ques­ About this chart Hudson Heights apartments tions about where they had been John Beach '69, the coordinator of the Tompkins County "Stop DWI" program, said blood alcohol • Senior Joseph M. Wunderlich, 21, and if they had been drinking. content (BAC) varies by individuals, and is dependent on several factors. Pleasant Street, Ithaca "If we think it warrants investi­ Age, gender, physical condition, amount offood consumed, medication, amount of sleep, stress The student charged with mari­ gation, we have them pulled over," level and other factors contribute to an individual's BAC. · juana possession and alcoholic con­ Curatolo said. Twenty-five drivers "The chart is a very general guide," Beach said. "We are all impacted differently." sumption inside a vehicle was: were pulled over and subjected to a • Junior Jonathan D. Wolin, 20, field sobriety test, he said. person's BAC only ifhe or she is said the checkpoints are funded the funds directly from local courts. Coddington Road, Ithaca The field test, Curatolo said, arrested, he said. through a contract between his orga­ City police are planning future Kleinhans, Woods - a student could consist of a number of differ­ In addition to the field tests, nization and local law enforcement DWI checkpoints, but Curatolo manager in the Egbert Dining Hall, ent steps. A person suspected of officers rely on such cues as blood­ agencies. could not say where or when the Wunderlich - a tri-captain of the being under the influence of alco­ shot eyes and erratic driving com­ "One hundred percentofour fund­ next ones would be. men's soccer team, and Wolin all hol or drugs could be asked to walk ing up to the checkpoint, Curatolo ing comes from drunk driving con­ "If you can't take the hint, then declined to comment. a straight line, recite the alphabet, said. "You take every factor and victions and their fines," Beach said. you 're always going to have to won­ Police chose the Hudson Street or touch their fingers to their nose, put them together and you make ''There's no tax money involved. It's der if we're around the next corner location partially because of com­ he said. your decision based on that." a way to keep money in the county, or over the next hill," he said. "And plaints received from local residents A blood or breathalyzer test is John Beach '69, Tompkins where it's assessed and collected." we have a few more tricks up our about reckless and fast drivers, administered to determine a County "Stop DWI" coordinator, A 1981 state law lets Beach collect sleeves which we haven't tried yet." II

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' • \ I • I 1 .. • ~ \' A I • • .. • I • -. • • ~ \ ' ...... :.: ..:.•.•..:.: ...· .. ·--· ...:.: .. :,.: .. . ·...... ·.· .. · .. ·...... -...... 6 THE ITHACAN November 11 1993 Mentors help-students Of"color connect·with:-;Cillege .... - . . . , ., . ,,. By Tung Hoang agreed to P.articipate. Now more color, said lrmaAlmirall-Padamsec, positive mentoring experience. as skills in coping with st.ndents of Ithacan Staff than 20 pairs are active. mentor and director oflhe Office of "There has been a bond of friend­ different cultures. : : : Many students of-color at Ithaca Minority Affairs. ship between my mentor and me," With commitment of different For students of color who often Colleg~fmd it-difficult to-relate.to. "There's a tremendous payoff said Ortiz, who has been· a partici­ measures, both mentorin'g· profes­ feel distant from their professors in faculty members, according to for the students to get involved. pant in the program since it first sors and students collaborate to cre­ their learning experience, the Ithaca Christopher Pool, mentor and as­ Students learn from their mentor began. She said she has gained a · ate a finer college education, College Mentoring Program is sistant professor of anthropology. who has knowledge, insights and new perspective since she com.es Xaykaothao said. avadahle to provide assistance and "Some students don't seem to disciplines," Padamsee said. "They from a different background. Program coordinator Nicole counseling. connect with faculty," Pool said. get to know, to understand and to Mentors also learn from their Case '94, who works with IO pairs, The Office of Minority Affairs "Professors recognize the difficul­ explore their [own] interests and involvement with the program. said it is necessary for students of and the Faculty Development Com- ties that students of color face and their professors'." Mentoring offers a very valuable color to take advantage of the pro­ 11111 tee began the program last fall, want to reduce isolation in their Doualy Xaykaothao '96, who experience to faculty who volun­ gram. "It is another route for them said Imre Tamas, a biology profcs­ learning experience." joined the program when it first teer their ti me and effort ,Tamas said. to get involved with the College ~or and mentor in the program. One aspect of the program in­ began, said she can talk to her men­ "Professors have the opportu­ community,".Case said. "The focus of the program is on cludes pairing students with pro­ tor about everything during their nity to develop a friendly relation­ At a meeting on Friday Oct. 29 the students," Tamas said. fessors in the same academic area. weekly meeting. ship with their student," Tamas with mentors, Case spoke of her Mentoring offers educational sup­ Students receive help from their "My mentor is more than excel­ said. "I learn from my student in experience and concerns as a stu- · port for motivated minority stu­ mentors in various ways, from aca­ lent," she said. "She has made a various levels." dent of color at Ithaca College. She dents, most of whom arc freshmen demic tutoring to diversity aware­ difference in my Ii fe. Whatever you Learning from his mentee in dif­ said she doesn't feel connected to and sophomores. ness and other non-academic con­ want, you can make it as long as ferent sorts of ways, Tamas said he the faculty or the textbooks. "The When the program first began, cerns such as securing internships you get to the right channel." has gained more profound interper­ material is not about me. They don't seven student-professor pairs and networking with alumni of Deina Ortiz '95 has also had a sonal communication skills, as well include me," Case said.

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Buses for 1fIBIANih\§CGr IlVITN CGr '.~~ ·-...... ,( .• ...... ,.,,., ...... • ..... •.... ,...... "·.. .. ' .....•, ...... ;;:_,iffe·: J Buses to New Yo_rk City (Port Authority) lt k: $43 Roundtrip - $22 One-Way y :~~ ------7:=-::·. .;; Buses to Long Island (Hempstead & Huntington) ., -¼ \· Three-piece acoustic groove \ $47 Round Trip - $24 One-Way from Janis Joplin to 4 Non Blondes · .. · ',:• v:.·-:-.~ -:_··· -··'~~-:·:·\: ··· :,-._.':.':.,• :· h':. ,' ;',, ,' • .,., •• ~-:.: :-:•• r:~ ,- TICKETS ON SALE Monday, November 15, 1993 Monday, November 8 through Tuesday, November 16 9:00 p.m. in Emerson Suites 10 AM - 2PM • Campus Center BUSES LEAVE FRIDAY, NOV. 19 Free Admission! AT4:00 FROM THE HILL CENTER Complimentary" coffee and desserts will be served. NOTE: One-Way tickets will not be on sale until November 11 8 THE ITHACAN November 11 1993 Campus Safety Log

The following incidents are among for an off-campus event being placed box had been pried open and the power Tompkins Community Hospital by Bangs Thursday, November 4 those reported to The Ithacan by the IC on windshields of vehlcles In upper A shut off to the first floor A side of Ter­ Ambulance after suffering a head and • A student reported damage to the Office of Public lnfonnation, based solely lot and Hudson Heights. race 6. The Incident occurred at ap­ neck Injury In Hill Center during a gym­ glass cover of a fire alarm pull box lo­ on reports from the Office of Campus ,..A student reported receiving a ha­ proximately 1o p.m. nastics routine. cated at the west entrance of Terrace 2. Safety. rassing/annoying message left on the ,.. A student reported an attempted ,.. A student reported receiving harass­ Anyone with any information regard­ message board of the student's resi­ forced entry into the student's residence ing/annoying telephone calls on the ing these entries is encouraged to con­ dence hall room door. hall room in Terrace 6. It appeared that Tuesday, November 2 student's residence hall room phone. tact the Office of Campus Safety at 27 4- ,..A staff member reported damage to a someone attempted to cut around the Tiwo students were referred judicially YA staff member reported damage to 3333. Unless otherwise specified, all bulletin board display case on the west doorknob sometime prior to 10:30 p.m. after possessing marijuana and drug para­ thewestentrancelobbywlndowofClarke reported incidents remain under Inves­ side of the Campus Center. It is un­ phernalia within a residence hall room. Hall. It Is unknown when the damage tigation. known when the damage occurred. ,.. A staff member reported damage to the occurred. ..-Officers assisted the Ithaca Police Monday, November 1 staff member's vehicle while It was parked • A staff member reported the theft of a FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29- Department and Cornell Police Depart­ ,..A student reported receiving harass­ in P lot between 4:30 p.m. and midnight printer cable from the psychology labo­ THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1993 ment in locating a non-student on cam­ ing/annoying telephone calls on the on October 29. ratory In Bogart Hall. It is believed the pus. The person was located and trans­ student's residence hall room phone. ,.. A student reported damage to the theft occurred within the past three ported to a medical facility. Tiwo students were referred Judicially student's vehicle while parked in O lot weeks. Friday, October 29 after using and possessing marijuana between 9:20 and 10:30 a.m. ,.. A student reported the theft of $100- ,.. A student was referred judicially after and drug paraphernalia within a resi­ ..-Toe Office of Campus Safety received $200 worth of jewelry from a residence attempting to gain access into a resi­ Sunday, October 31 dence hall room. a telephone call at12:42 p.m. stating that hall room in Terrace BB. dence hall by climbing the balcony of YA student was referred judicially after Tiwo students were referred judicially there was a bomb set to go off in Smiddy YA student reported the theft of $150 in the building. damaging a window within a residence for use of marijuana within a residence Hall at 2 p.m. The building was evacu­ cash from the student'sfonner residence ..-Four students were referred judicially hall. hall room. Oneofthestudentswasalso ated, checked, and reoccupied at 2:15 hall room in Eastman Hall. The theft for use of marijuana and possession of Tiwo non-students were ordered off arrested for criminal possession of a p.m. occurred on November 3 while the stu­ drug paraphernalia within a residence campus after driving their vehicle in an controlled substance asa result of other Tiwo students were referred judicially dent was moving from the residence hall hail room. unauthorized area of Ithaca College drugs located within the residence hall after a physical altercation occurred within room. ,.. A student was arrested for criminal property behind the Terrace residence room. a residence hall. ,.. A staff member reported a physical possession of stolen property after pos­ halls. ,.. A staff member reported broken glass • A staff member reported graffiti written altercation between two roommates sessing a car stereo which had been YOlficers responded to the Health Cen­ near the Candy Shoppe area of the on the wall in the west stairway of Hilliard within a residence hall room. The inci­ taken from a vehicle parked at College ter to assist in transporting an individual Campus Center. It appeared that two Hall. The graffiti was written sometime dent will be referred for judicial review. Circle apartments. The student was also to the Ithaca Police Department after glass bottles and a glass countertop within 24 hours prior to its observationon ,.. A student reported being followed by a referred judicially fo1 thefts from a vend­ the student was assaulted in an off­ portion of the Candy Shoppe cupboard the wall. suspicious, unknown male while the stu­ ing machine within a residence hall. campus altercation . had been broken. YA student was transported to the Health dent walked from an area near the lower ..-The Ithaca Fire Department re­ YA student was referred judicially after ,.. A student was referred judicially after Center from Ford Hall for treatment of an athletic fields towards campus. sponded to a fire alarm in Hilliard Hall. walking into a residence hall room and burning incense within a residence hall arm laceration. YTwo students were referred judicially The alarm was activated due to dam­ urinating on the floor. room. YA student reported receiving a harass­ after soliciting on campus without a per­ age to a pull box located on the Tiwo students were referred judicially ,.. A student reported a broken window ing/threatening message on the student's mit. The students were found placing second floor. after possessing and using marijuana pane on the student's residence hall residence hall room answering machine. flyers on vehicles in a parking lot. and drug paraphernalia within a resi­ room In Emerson Hall. The incident dence hall room. occurred between 12:30 and 7 a.m. Saturday, October 30 YOfficers recovered a vehicle in A lot ..-officers investigated a motor vehicle Wednesday, November 3 ,.. A student was referred judicially and which had been reported to the accident on the main campus road near • A staff member reported the theft of Safety Tip: arrested for criminal mischief and tam­ Tompkins County Sheriffs Department the east road in which a student lost threecompactdiscsfromapackagewithin Students often become crime victims pering after removing items from an­ as stolen from Danby Road. control of the vehicle on icy pavement the Garden Apartment 28 mail room. because they share their secret access other person's vehicle and damaging YA student reported receiving harass­ and struck a curb. The student was • Astudentwastransportedtothe Health numbers to credit cards, money ma­ them. ing/annoying telephone calls on the · transported to the Health Center for a Center by Bangs Ambulance after the chine cards, and telephone calling cards ..-Three students were referred judi­ student's residence hall room phone. complaint of a head and neck injury. studentfell near the main traffic circle and with others. cially after using and possessing mari­ . YA student reported being harassed YA student reported being harassed sustained a knee injury. To ensure that you do not become a juana and drug paraphernalia within a by someone who had placed a condom by someone who had smeared a food ..-Two students were referred judicially victim, never share these access codes residence hall room. on the student's residence hall room item on the student's residence hall after violating the alcohol policy by pos­ with anyone. The access codes should ,.. A staff member reported unautho­ doorknob. room door. sessing a keg within their residence hall be stored separately from the cards. rized solicitation after observing flyers ,..A staff member reported that a breaker ,.. A student was transporte,:I to room. fricby ~ov 1~ 1'1'11 • WATERFRONT gvru 702 Willow Ave, Ithaca, NY to 1c1ru \to-c1tm Friday Night: lllJl ltllcltcl •

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The Anatomy of the Otibank Classic card: a body of services and peace of mind for Students. For years, scientists could only theorize about the Citibank Clas.sic Visa® card, unable to actually observe anything below its epidermal surface (i.e. the plastic). Surely, the highly intelligent services were evidence of an advanced brain. But with the latest advances in x-ray technology,

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Fig. A Fig. B is head to toe more evolved than ever imagined. ,i At its backbone are 3 services to cover the purchases you make

on the card. Starting at the Lower Costa! Spine, we see Citibank Price Protection can assure you of the best price. All you have to do is discover the same item

Scientists theorize that the mind of the Citibank Classic Vi~a advertised in print for less, within 60 days, and Citibank cardmember (Fig A) is secure became it receives superior service; the mind ofthe non-Citibank Classic Visa cardmember 1 (F~ BJ is not secure heca11se-co11/d it he-it has a Krew loo1e 7 will refund the difference up to $150 • Along the Oops-lt- Slipped Disc, Buyers Security'm can cover those purchases against accidental damage, fire or theft for 90 days from the date of purchase'; and Citibank Lifetime Warranty•m allows one to extend the warranty

2 for the expected service life of eligible products up to 12 years • So if you ever buy a wdlkman, a stereo, Monarch Notes® Version: whatever, it will be reassuring to know that Citibank can bend and be flexible while still lending support. With your purchases covered,

,i The backbone is then connected to the cranium or headbone. You can actually see it on the top left no fee, and a low rate, the hand corner of the carcl. Look at the bottom of the page. The Citibank Photocard has the head of the Citibank Clas.sic Visa card will

card.holder on it, as well as his or her own signature, right on the front. That way, it will help prevent fraud. go easy on your Nervous System. It will make a good form of ID as well, since you get to choose your own photo. ,i But what about the Call 1-800-CITIBANK

Nervous System?The fact is, it doesn't have one, not in the spinal cord nor in the brain. What it has is the (I-800-248-4226), extension 19.

Very Calm System. Because even if your credit card gets stolen, or gets lost, an involuntary muscle called

the Extendus Anewcardeus activates the Lost Wallerm Service which can replace your card usually

within 24 hours. ,i As suspected, there's another involuntary muscle: the heart -a beating and caring heart, big enough to give students special discounts and savings. You'll receive a $20 Airfare Discount

3 on domestic flights ; savings on mail order purchases, sports equipment, magazines and music; a low

4 variable interest rate of 15.4% ; and, no annual fee. (In other words, the card itself doesn't cost a forelimb

and a hindlimb.) ,i Naturally the heart of the Citibank Visa card pumps life and personalized customer

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'Certain conditions and exclusions apply. Please refer to your Summary of Add1uonal Program Information. Buyer.; Se_cumy IS undcrwntten by The Zunch lntemallonal UK Limited. 'Certain restrictions and hmllations apply Underwntte!J by the New Hampshire lnslJ!'!nce Company. Service hfe ~pectancy vanes by p~uct and_ IS a1 least the mirumwn based on retail industry clala. Details ofcCM.-ragc are available m your Summary ofAdd1Uonal Program lnfonna11on. Offer expires 6/30~. M1rumwn ucket purchase price is S100. Rebates are for Citibank student cardmembm on ticlccts ~ by ISE Flights o~.· The ~nnual Percentage_ Rate (A~~) for pun:hases IS 15.4% as of 10/93 and may vary quarterly. The APR for cash advances is l'lll'!b. If a finance charl!IC IS ,m~, ihe nurumum IS SO cents. There JS an add1nonal finance ch~ for~ cash advance transaction equal to 2% of the amount ofeach cash advance transaction; however, 11 will not be les5 than S2.00 or grealer than SI0.00. MonaJth• Notes are published by Monarch Press, a division of Simon & Schuster, a Paramount Communications Company. Used by pennJSSion of publisher. © 1993 Citibank (South Dakota). N.A. Member FDIC. 10 THE ITHACAN November 11, 1993 OPINION Mission continues LETTERS After years of leading the College's growth, Whalen shouldn't sit back McCullough President James J. Whalen has signed more than 57 percent of all deserves diplomas ever issued by Ithaca College, and he will give out at least 5,500 more before his term possibly ends in 1997. • Last month, Whalen accepted the Board of Trustees' request to stay praise here for at least three more years. In making the request, Herman E. Muller, chairman of the Board of Trustees, said the College needed I am writing this letter in re­ Whalen to provide stable leadership during changing times in higher sponse to a recent Residence Hall education. Association meeting where the Di­ Whalen has provided rector of Dining Services, Howard THE ITHACAN'S VIEW outstanding leadership in McCullough and Assistant Vice several areas since he arrived President Dana Aaro'tl were invited at Ithaca College in 1975. However, the school is facing mafor chal­ in to receive feedback regarding lenges over the next three years and Whalen must continue this trend. dining services and the recently During Whalen's tenure, Ithaca College has grown from a small, implemented ID express program. relatively unknown college to a large, regional college that attracts During this meeting Mr. Aaron students from all over the world. and Mr. McCullough were met with • When Whalen arrived, there were 66 majors and no minors at IC. many complaints and constructive Today there are 108 majors and 48 minors. criticism regarding Ithaca College's • Since 1975, the College has invested $65 million in new construc­ dining services program. tion, increasing the physical plant of the school by 500,000 square feet. The intent of this letter is not to In addition, the College has invested $23.5 million in campus renova­ discount the feedback students gave tions. during the meeting. I think it is • Eighteen years ago, there were 16 endowed scholarships valued vitally important that student's at $155,105. Today that number has increased to 117 scholarships Three years? Hal ... No problem! voices be heard by administrators, valued at $12.7 million. particularly when they have sug­ • During this time, the enrollment of the College increased by 1,800 gestions for improving a service. students and more than 220 full-time faculty have been added. However, I have been a resi­ While many challenges lie ahead for Ithaca College and higher dence director at Ithaca College for education in the next three years, two are of particular interest to this Gays in military don't six years and have rarely heard the campus and for Whalen to act on - financial aid and race relations. positive aspects of the dining ser­ Approximately 22 percent of tuition and fees is currently used for vices program highlighted, of which financial aid. Last year, an auditing team warned the College will be affect· performance I believe there are many. I feel that entering "grave financial risk" if student financial aid reaches 25 percent praise for Mr. McCullough's ef­ I am a student at Ithaca College, of the income from tuition and fees. forts are long overdue. currently in Spain. I recently re­ "A person s sexual While lobbying should continue for increased financial aid, the When I began working at IC, I ceived a copy of the Oct. 7 issue of preference has nothing College also needs to change its merit-based scholarship policy. was immediately impressed at Mr. The Ithacan. Currently, the College does not accept merit-based scholarships and in to do with his or her McCullough's accessibility to stu­ In this issue, three students with the past has turned away scholarships from organizations who refuse to dents. military backgrounds presented abil~ty to perform as a change their criteria to fit the need-based policy of the College. Merit­ He is constantly seeking student their opinions regarding the issue soldier." based scholarships will not affect the financial aid packages of those input and he "does sothfuu~ many of homosexuals in the military, and -Second Lt. Nigel Lewis '94 who need aid, since the College would not normally receive these forums. He attends Student Gov­ I would like to correct the impres­ scholarships under the current policy. In some cases these scholarships ernment and RHA meetings, pro­ sion given by these examples that professional soldiers. may help needy students who may qualify for them. vides opportunities for students to all military personnel share these There are also no "rules and In regards to the race relations issue, Whalen should continue to give written feedback while eating views. traditions [against homosexuals] work on the demands presented by about 60 students during a sit-in in the dining halls and has always After four years of military ser­ that we members of the military following the noose incident last month. Some of the demands concern­ given Resident Assistants the op­ vice, including two years at the have come to deem: scared" (Alan ing the increase of faculty and students of color, and ethnic studies tion to bring him into their halls Marion Military Institute, I have Zimmennan). classes are controlled by forces sometimes out of the College's hands. where he is willing to get feedback seen soldiers from many different "People who advocate homo­ Other demands are easier to implement. and provide free pizza. When he is backgrounds, and what they all had sexual rights in the military ... are To add the observance of Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, the College able to respond to their feedback he in common was professionalism. [not} playing with people's lives," would only have to delay the spring opening of school by one day. This does. The pursuit of common objec­ as Spc-4 Smwe argues. Every year I have been at IC, Mr. day can be subtracted from the multitude of breaks in the fall. Since a It is the soldiers' paranoia of a tives allowed them to overcome McCullough has improved the qual­ Student Alumni Association was recently created, it shouldn't be very mysterious minority that suppos­ any possible differences. ity of dining services in some way difficult to establish a black-latino alumni association. edly threatens their manhood which A person· s sexual preference has and always in response to student causes dangerous splits in the unit. Jeffrey J. Selingo nothing to do with his or her ability feedback. Over the years the qual­ If you research the topic, you Editorial Page Editor to perfonn as a soldier. ity and variety of food offered ha~ Furthennore, in an actual com­ will find 'that homosexuals have improved. been around long before any anny bat situation, nobody thinks about During the RHA meeting, I was had been fonned, and you take for The ITHACAN sex. The first priority is to stay alive struck by the many and varied di­ and to accomplish the mission. example the armies of Alexander Ithaca Collegc"s weekly student newspaper etary needs of the students present. the Great and later on, the armies of 269 Park Hall, Ithaca College All soldiers swear to protect and It occurred to me that there were the Roman Empire, you will notice 953 Danby Road, Ithaca N.Y. 14850-7258 uphold the Constitution of the only thirty students in the room that homosexuals fought alongside Editorial: (607) 274·3207 Advertising: (607) 274-3208 United States. expressing their concerns and pref­ everybody else. Fax: (607) 274-1664 Internet: [email protected] This Constitution is based on the erences. Imagine trying to plan a In the armies of the world today, equality of all citizens under the menu that satisfies the needs of Editorial law and even though "Working in homosexuality has not created Editor in Chief ..... : ...... · ...... William Rubenstein 4,000 students. problems. Managing Editor ...... Aaron Williams the military is not like working at I would also like to note that Editorial Page Editor ...... Jeffrey J. Selingo IBM" (Spc-4 Craig Stowe's letter) Maybe some of these paranoid several times, I have had a parent Projects Director ...... Chris Lewis but they both have to live up the "soldiers" in the military should call me requesting that their son or News Editors ...... Liz Gartner, Scott L. Matson ideals of the Constitution. reconsider their priorities. Assistant News Editor ...... Kevin Harlin daughters dietary needs be met. It is not the homosexuals in the Accent Editor ...... Kelly Rohrer Upon referring them to Mr. military that divide the unit cohe­ Second Lt. Nigel Lewis, Assistant Accent Editor ...... Emily Carr McCullough, they have always been Sports Editor ...... Brian Kohn sion. as Alan Zimmennan alleges. Army Reserves accommodated. Assistant Sports Editor ...... Joshµa Milne It is the homophobia of a few un- Spanish'94 Photo Editor ...... Rena M. DiFillppo Student input is vital to the suc­ Assistant Photo Editor ...... Jeff K. Brunelle cess of any of the programs and Announcements Editor ...... Steve M. Chaggaris LETTERS TO THE EDITOR services offered by Ithaca College. Layout Editor ...... Chris Gervais I know our dining services program is not perfect. However, I would Business : If you have an opinion you feel strongly about, or if there is a Advertising Director ...... Hilary Walton like to thank Mr. McCullough for The Salea Managers ...... Kristin Card, Karen Wernick situation you would l_ike to address, please submit a letter to continuing to listen to our students. Ithacan. Letters to the editor are due by 5 p.m. every Monday in ClasaHleds/Comlcs Editor ...... Amanda Coppola I believe his willingness to hear Business Manager ...... : ...... Kevin Sturmer Park Hall 269. Please include name, major, year in school and Manager, Student Publications ...... - ...... Paul Heaton phone number. Letters may be sent via the Internet (electronic what students have to say has been mail) to [email protected]. at the heart of the positi_ve changes Letters to the editor are due by 5 p.m. the Monday before publication, and he has implemented in the dining should Include name, phone number, major and year of graduation. Letters must be less than 400 words and typewritten. The Ithacan reserves the services program_over the past few right to edit letters for length, clarity and taste. Opinions expressed on these CORRECTION years. pages do not necessarily reflect those of faculty, staff and administration. "The lthacan's View• represents the majority opinion of the executive staff.· Chris Pool is an assistant professor in the anthropology depart­ Judy Raper Founded in 1931 ment. He was incorrectly identified in a Nov. 4 letter to the editor. Residence Director November 11 1993 7 THE ITHACAN 11 I LETTERS I COMMENTARY Ithacan deserved niore JOHN LEO attention for awards I like to think The Ithacan staff time and efforts to win the National A for effort, or for showing up has good judgment as to what should Pacemaker Award are not as im­ be on the front page ·of the paper, portant? hat is the hardest your argument,' that's almost thus I believe I read the most im­ Instead though, you thought it mark to get at This is a national like being racist and sexist." portant news on my first glance at wise to remind us that a) it snowed W many America col­ problem. Outside of The current campus climate leges? the paper. last week, and b) we'll be needing makes professors reluctant to Answer: C. Like the Califor­ economics, science and This past Thursday though, I our "snowshoes, parkas and gloves challenge grade in flauon. was proven otherwise as I came mailed from home." nia Candor, it is a seriously en­ engineering, collegians Harvard Prof. Harvey dangered species. It may need across an article ["Pulitzer Paper," Seriously, why don't you get are getting such good Mansfield said during the panel Nov. 4) that undoubtly deserves to your priorities straight and place massiv~outside help to survive. discussion on grading that "pro­ Otherwise, it could easily go the be on the front page, but was left for more emphasis on what great deeds marks these days that it fessors have lost faith in the way of marks like D, E and F, the third. the students of IC are performing, seems average student value of reason and hence lost Why was "Pulitizer Paper" not not the weather? all believed to be extinct. faith in the value of their status. Harvard instructor William are disappearing from the on the front page? Obviously, The We can all take pride in The Their inability to give grades Cole put it this way in an article Ithacan staff has worked hard to Ithacan 's "Pulitzer" award. campus, all replaced by that reflect the standards ofthcir in the Chro11icle ofHigher Edu­ earn such a "prestigious national I hope next time you will boast profession is a sign of a scriou~ cation: A generation ortwo ago, outstanding achievers. award." Why then are you denying your accomplishments to the com­ loss of morale." students who mentally dropped yourselves the recognition and munity and show the rewards one Boston Un1vcrs1ty Prof. out of classes settle for "a credit you deserve? can earn from "massive commit­ graduated with honors. Edwin Delattrc says. ""if C\'cry­ gentleman's C." Now, he says, I can't imagine that when the ment of time, energy and sacri­ Vanishing Breed thing 1s subjective and arbitrary. perfunctory students get "a Bombers won a national champi­ fice ... " as stated by Paul Heaton. This is a national problem. Out­ and you try to apply standard~. onship space was not made forthem gcntlcperson's B," and ··a side of economics, science and cn­ you run afoul of the prevailing gcntleperson 's A-" is not out of gineeri ng, collegians arc getting ethos of the time." on the front page. Sarah Bjelland the question, especially in the such good marks these days that it Still, whatever the failings Docs The Ithacan believe their Corporate Communication '96 humanities. seems average _student arc disap­ of the academy, inflated grades An English tutor told pearing from the campus, all re­ don't start there. The same vi­ Harvard Magazine, "In our de­ placed by outstanding achievers. rus has afflicted high schools South Hill bike trail is partment, people rarely recei vc It's reminiscent of Garrison for at least two decades. Since a grade lower than B-. Even B­ Keillor's fictional Lake Wobcgon, 1972, when the College Board 'waste of money' is kind of beneath mediocre." where "all the children arc ab6ve began keeping tabs, the per­ As college tuition has average." centage of collegebound seniors I would like to respond to the all thought it was terrible. climbed, grade inflation has What is going on here? Market reporting high marks in school article on the new South Hill recre­ Your article also failed to men­ risen right along with it, per­ forces surely play a role. Colleges has almost tripled. In 1972, 28.4 ation Trail ["Biking the back­ tion the barriers or the piles of brush haps muting complaints about are competing for a pool of students percent of those taking the test woods," Nov. 4]. or logs constructed to block many what it all costs. At Harvard in who expect and sometimes demand said they had Aor B averages in First I would like to reply to of the smaller trails off the main 1992, 91 percent of undergradu­ high marks. high school. By 1993, it was 83 several vauge assertions made by one. ate grades were B- or higher. "Students complain in ways they percent. This happened while Mr. Franz and Mr. Guglielmo. What I do agree with Mr. Jordan and Stanford is top-heavy with A's didn't before," says Martin SAT scores were falling from a was the "toll" on the local commu­ Mr. Schmaizl's statement of and B's too; only about six Meyerson, former president of the mean combined score of937 to nities by people mountain biking Shindagin Hollow and Connecticut percent of all grade are C's. At University of Pennsylvania. the current 902. on these trails? Hill as better places to mountain Princeton,A'srosefrom33per­ "Teachers find it easier to avoid the For whatever reasons (and The wildflower trail looks a bike, but what if you don't have a cent of all grades to 40 percent hassle and just give higher grades." the feel-good self-esteem move­ • whole lot worse since the construc­ car? in four years. And good marks sustain enrollments ment is surely one), marks have tion started, and if there were any It's takes a hour to ride out to Because of grade inflation, in academic departments, a sign of broken free of performance and wildflowers left they are now bur­ these places, and a hour to ride outstanding students and aver­ success for professors. become more and more unreal. ied under a foot of dirt or bulldozed back, and most people don't have age students are often bunched Many people think grade infla­ They are designed to please, completely! time for a two hour commute just to at the top. "In some depart­ tion started with the.generous marks not to measure or to guide stu­ I am a avid mountain biker, and get to the trails! ments, A stands for average,'' professors gave to mediocre stu­ dents about strengths and weak­ the things I have seen there in the I would like to state that I believe Harvard senior Dianne Reeder dent in the '60s to keep them out of nesses. last seven months disturb me deeply. the whole project was a tremendous said at a panel discussion on the draft during the Vietnam War. Give A ·sand B's for aver­ It was a very beautiful area. waste of money. $400,000 could inflated grades last spring. Fallout from the "60s is involved; age effort and the whole system I used to hike and mountain bike have been much better spent on "Since so many of us have A­ during the campus upheavals. radi­ becomes a game of "Let·, Pre­ in the area often, and saw many trail maintance, maybe. or in a more averages. our grades arc mean­ cals attacked grading as a display of tend." Parents arc pleased and joggers. skiers, walkers. runners, suitable location. ingle<;s. · · institutional power over the young. don ·1 keep the pre'>~Urc on. Stu­ and animals. The trail could have been beau­ The avalanche of A·~ 1s pro­ And. in general. the pn\l "6(b dent~ tend to relax and l!Xpcct On a 90 minute ride there this tifully maintained for years with ducing a <;im1lar avalanche or makecover or Glmpu,e, ha~ been high reward~ for low output. Saturday I saw one hiker, one jog­ that much money. Or at worst wid­ students graduating with hon­ crucial What happen, when they Jlllll ger, and no animals unless you count ened a little. or\. "Relativism is the h.ey word to­ the real world where A and B the dead squirrel hit by some piece I bclive the shameless, politi­ Han'(lJ·d Maga-::.ine cites an day ... says Cole. "There·~ a general reward.., arc rarely given for C of construction equipment. On a cally motivated (to quote Mr.Franz, unidentified dean of admissions conception in the literary-academic and D work'1 nice day before all of this I would "the concept of the trail is what is at a top-six law school saying world that holding things to high see dozens of people daily, now it's important") random destruction of his office ignores magna cum standards-like logic, argument, John Leo. a contributing editor almost deserted. wilderness that has taken place is a laude and cum laudc honors having an interesting thesis-is pa­ }<1r U.S. News & World Report. I've also talked to a lot of the crying shame, and Mr. Franz ought from Harvard because so many triarchal, Eurocentric and conser­ is a syndicated columnist. people I've seen over the summer to be ashamed of himself. applicants have them. In 1993, vative. If you say, 'This paper is no and fall, and not one has come out 83.6 percent of Harvard seniors good because you don't support Copyright John Leo. 1993 and said "boy, this is really a great David Love project they're doing here!" They Jazz Studies '97 "l------1THE ITHACAN INQUIRER By Heather Patterson "Where would your ideal college location be and why?"

Olaf Wouters '94 Marisa Karas '97 Colin Merritt '97 Tracy Brady '97 Dan Burkowitz '96 Amy Lesperance '96 Politics Speech Pathology Cinema Cinema Accounting Spanish Education Photography Photography "South Carolina "Somewhere where "Malibu, California "The outskirts of "Just like Ithaca, but "Here, l;>ecause I like because the there are four sea- because it never Boston because there warmer and by a the fall and winter weather's nice, the sons and a town with snows there." is a lot to do, there's major city." here, but it could be a beach is there, and enough going on, but fourseasons,andit's little warmer." you can still go skiing enough quiet to allow much closer to in the winter." me to study." home." 12 THE ITHACAN 'November 11, 1993

ESSAY WILLIAM SAFIRE Sleazy Senate inquiry n a cynical attempt to make Bob Packwood a scapegoat Do you keep a diary? I for generations of congres­ More of us should: it sional sexism, the Senate Ethics Committee put Americans on not only lets us blow off notice: no private diary is safe steam and articulate from government investigators. Ironically, the recently estab­ private thoughts that lished constitutional right to pri­ would be impolitic or vacy, which forms the basis for all the pro-choice law in this libelous if said out loud, country, is being undermined by but also preserves panicky senators determined to memories and reveals punish one oftheirown for boor­ ish behavior in a previous era. our youthful selves to • Do you keep a diary? More of our aging selves. us should: it not only lets us blow off steam and articulate private thoughts that would be impolitic ior deservedly much higher than or libelous if said out loud, but tolerated a generation ago to ac­ ~ also preserves memories and re­ cusations of yesteryear's crude .A veals our youthful selves to our office gropings. aging selves. That's ex post facto morality, 9'T ON& M0R6 S6NS6L&&5 ACCli'S~T LINK6t> n, WATCHll\le Unlike a letter, it is intended which is neither ethical nor fair. TOO MANY RO,\t, RrJMNSR CARTOO~S,,,, to be totally private, written on But this ethics investigation our own time and in our personal is not about accusations of one space, for each diarist to keep or senator's past boorishness. destroy. It's about satisfying the need In the case of a public figure, for vengeance in the minds of so a diary is a godsend to historians. many women workers who have PUBLIC PRIVATE Samuel Pepys, the English naval had to endure the demeaning & functionary who kept a detailed domination of lecherous bosses. ANNA QUINDLEN diary three centuries ago, gave Packwood has been chosen to be us an invaluable glimpse into the harassment's celebrity villain. social conditions of his time. To some nervous colleagues, Beavis, Butt-head, mom and dad Oregon's Bob Packwood is a his ruination has become the Pepysian diarist. In the 25 years ticket to forgiveness for all con­ l' ve been his friend, this prin­ gressional sexist sins. ustin was five and Jessica cipled moderate has kept volu­ That's why Pepysing Toms was two, and by the time Neither Big Daddy will make all the choice~ we minous notes on life as a light­ demand the Packwood diaries; A Austin had finished with should make for our individual kids, if we are willing to ning rod. it has been "determined that the the lighter he took from atop their do the hard work of making choices for them .I know He recorded his crusade to documents in their entirety may mother's dresser, Jessica was keep the legality of abortion from be relevant and probative." trapped inside a burning house. that's difficult. I know from experience ,that it is being eroded in the Senate, which If Senate staffers or hearing And Beavis and Butt-head were tempti_ng tQ use .television as .a. ~jql~::-,~,. made him public enemy Number examiners rummage through his in big, big trouble. One of anti-abortion forces. diary, they'll find personal ru­ Since the morning early this supervi,iori is harder with fatchkey"kids an·d ·'. ~ · His fight to make the tax code minations and titillating tidbits month when Austin Messner set adolescents. simple and fair, culminating in to embarrass the man for years. the fire that killed his little sister, ------­ the sweeping 1986 reform, infu­ That's the scapegoat idea: his actions apparently inspired by riated the loophole legion of ac­ load all our sins onto Packwood cartoon characters, several things It's as though we all said, well, every day. countants and tax lawyers. His and drive him out to Azazel, the have happened. there's a lot of poison in those George Gerbner of the leadership of Republican sup­ demon in the desert. The fire chief in the Ohio town cleansers under the sink so govern­ Annenberg School for Communi­ port of Israel made him a pariah In its zeal to get right with the where Austin lives has gone on a ment better regulate it before the cation at the University of Pennsyl­ in the Bush White House. gender avengers, the committee tear against Beavis and Butt-head, baby drinks some. vania in Philadelphia, who has stud­ And, as diarists from Pepys to has voted to rape the right to the two moronic MTV animated It's as though we talked about ied the issue of television violence Packwood do, he included the privacy, which under the pen­ adolescents who say "Cool-heh­ smoking and left the tobacco in­ for years, said at a conference ear­ insiders' gossip of his time. umbra of the Constitution, as heh-heh" when anything bursts into dustry and the feds to fight it out, lier this year, "The notion of paren­ He expressed the anguish of pro-choicers say should be im­ flames. ignoring the fact that individuals tal control is an upper-middle-class his failing marriage and his en­ portant to both sexes. MTV has agreed to air the show can give up cigarettes. conceit.'' dangered eyesight, and may have Only when a crime has been later at night, with fire references We read that children between That makes individual action on noted when his friends told him charged can prosecutors make a expunged. the ages of two and 12 watch an television sound impossible, futile, he was drinking too much beer. case for examining personal And Jessica's death has become average of 25 hours of'IV a week. even silly. Now he is facing charges in­ records. a powerful anecdotal exhibit in a We read that by the time she reaches But the truth is that neither alter­ stigated by longtime political However, no criminal indict­ renewed effort to make entertain­ 18 the average American kid will native government control, indus­ foes and driven by senators ea­ ments are remotely contemplated mentindustry leaders clean up their have seen thousands of televised try control can completely talce the ger to placate feminists after the in this case; "sexual harass­ act or, as Attorney General Janet killings. _ place of . ' interrogation of Anita Hill. ment" law doesn't go back that Reno threatened during a Senate And we act as if those numbers Neither Big Daddy will make all They say he made passes at far. hearing, have government do it for are inevitable when in fact we help the choices we should make for our an average of one woman a year Even so, the fishing commit­ them. create them. individual kids, if we are willing to for 20 years not slyly demanding tee has subpoenaed Packwood's Senators wondered how that Parental control is not the only do the hard work of making choices affection for advancement, but lifetime-of-diaries, insisting would work, whether it would part of this issue, or even the most - for them.I know that's difficult. clumsily grabbing and kissing "there is no constitutional pri­ amount to government censorship. importantpart.Butit'stheonlypart I know from experience that it them. vacy right" to personal papers Experts wondered about the link being ignored in the discussions of is tempting to use television as a He is not accused of threaten­ as the ACLU sleeps. between television violence and TV violence and kids. baby sitter. I know supervision is ing to block careers, the essence What hypocrisy. Feminists, real-life violence. I don't propose that parents act harder with latchkey kids and ado­ ofwhatwenowprohibitassexual who looked to Packwood for Manufacturers wondered how alone. It is clear that TV producers lescents. harassment; on the contrary, privacy protection when they many people would spring for tele­ are going to have to police them­ But a 5-year-old who has the run Packwood hired and advanced were using him, now undermine visions with the V-chip, which selves or government officials are of the programming? Come on. qualified women when equal everyone's civil liberty in abus­ could be used to screen out violent going to start doing it for them. Making the distinction_!>etween opportunity was denied else­ ing him. programs. They can't be let off the hook. what they want to do and what is where in the male-dominated And so to bed. No one much wondered why a · But neither can I. good for them that's a parent's job Senate. · ~-year-old child was watching Iknowmykids,notJackValenti description. The scapegoaters are apply­ MTV.' odanet Reno. Ages 10, eight and And it extends to the remote ing today's standards of behav- Copyright 1993 N.Y. Times Service Kids and violent 'IV, violent 'IV - alm~t five, they are too young to control. and violence, violence and kids. watch MTV, if for no other reason I'm all for wiping out the growth The only people missfng from than that I don't have the time to market in remarkably realistic fake this discussion are the parents. counteract all the piggy messages blood. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Where are we? about women they'll get from mu­ But sanity can begin at home. Gone. sic videos. Congress will hold hearings Letters t~:the editor are due by 5 p.m. every Mqnday in Abdicated. They are too young to watch the while all the entertainment types Park Halli.269. Please include name, ·major, year In school­ If the .industry bas given up on ··'.Tennioator,, · "Diehard" or· · will cry censorship: ln the mean­ and phone number. Letters may be sent via the Internet standaidsin-whatitproduces, many .. ~bo'' movies. They need more time, there is the do-it-yourself ap- (electron~ mail) to [email protected]. of us have done the same in what , timeforreadin_g.drawing,. figh~ng proach. ._ wepennk . - with one another and to~g me Copyright l99:.fN.Y. Times Service ...... ~ , I !• 14 THE ITHACAN November 11. 1993 WHAT'S HAPPENING Diversity Peer Educators, Meet- and Safety Meeting, SMR, "Politics and Economics: Behind Thursday, Ing, Demotta Room, Egbert Hall, 5 EgbertHall, 4 p.m. Thursday, the Scenes at the World Bank," p.m. Peter Riddleberger, Textor 103, 7 November 11 CC&SE/C, Manager Meeting, November 18 p.m. CSN; Educational Programming, NMR, Egbert Hall, 4:30 p.m. VETERAN'S DAY Room 112, Smiddy Hall, 7:30 ProtestantCommunlty,Meetlng, OMA-Mentoring, Meeting, SMR, ResldenUal Life, RA lnservlce, p.m. Egbert Hall, 9 a.m. NMR, Egbert Hall, 7 p.m. Faculty Colloquium Serles Lec­ Mu Iler Chapel, 6:30 p.m. ture, Kathryn Howd Machan, Pre-Concert Lecture,John White, Resldentlal Lffe, RA Training, Con. Kuumba, "Apollo Night," Muller Demotta, Egbert Hall, 12 p.m. Room 201, Friends Hall, 7:30 p.m. EXCEL, Seminar, Room 110, .ferenceRoom EgbertHall 10am Chapel, 7:30 p.m. Phillips Hall, 7 p.m. · ' ' · · lnter1althRellglousCouncll,Meet- AMA, Promotions Committee Career Planning & Placement, Student Recital, Chamber Music, Ing, Laub & Phillips Room, Muller Meeting, Conference Room, Egbert CSN, Educational Programming, How To Find A Job Workshop, Auditorium, Ford Hall, 8:15 p.m. Chapel, 12 p.m. Hall, 8 p.m. Room 112, Smiddy Hall, 7:30 p.m. Demotta Room, Egbert Hall, 12 p.m. ·cc&SE/C, Dining Hall Study Area, Board of Publications, Board International Programs, Brown Ithaca College Concerts, Paul Office of International Programs, Egbert Dining Hall, 8:30 p.m. to 12:30 Meeting, Bag Lunch, NMR, Egbert Hall,12 Winter Consort, Auditorium, Ford SMR, Egbert Hall, 7:30 Internship Orientetlon Meeting, a.m. p.m. Hall, 8:15 p.m. p.m. NMR, Egbert Hall, 12:10 p.m. Graduate Cello Lecture/Recital, Career Planning, Campus Re­ Student Affairs, Campus Life CC&SE/C, Dining Hall Study Area, Orientation, Steering Committee Christopher Wilson, Nabenhauer, Meeting, Demotta Room, Egbert Egbert Dining Hall, 8:30 p.m. to cruiting, Clark Lounge, Egbert Hall, Meeting, SMR, Egbert Hall, 1:15 Ford Hall, 9 p.m. Hall, 3p.m. 12:30 a.m. 8p.m. p.m. Student Recital, Composition CC&SE/C, SEM Meeting, Confer­ Registrar's Office, Meeting, Ongoing ence Room, Egbert Hall, 4 p.m. Monday, Premieres, Auditorium, Ford Hall, Demotta Room, Egbert Hall, 2 p.m. 8:15 p.m. Events Residential LHe, RA Training Ses­ November 15 Staff Council Meeting, NMR, sion, Laub Room, Muller Chapel, CC&SE/C, Dining Hall Study Egbert Hall, 2:30 p.m. Handwerker Gallery presents 5:45 p.m. VPSACL, Director's Meeting, Area, Egbert Dinir:!g Hall, 8:30 p.m. American Greek Revival Archi­ NMR, Egbert Hall, 9 a.m. to 12:30 a.m. CC&SE/C, AIDS Work Meeting, tecture Exhibition, weekdays 1o Residential Life, AA Meeting, Emerson 8, Phillips Hall, TBA a.m.-6p.m.; 10a.m.-9p.m. on Thurs­ Phillips Room, Chapel, 7 p.m. Sociology Dept, Minority Faculty Campus Safety, Meeting, Towers CC&SE/C, Meeting, Conference days; fo a.m.-2 p.m. on Saturdays. Experience Committee, Confer­ Dining Hall, 9 p.m. Kuumba, Apollo Night, Muller ence Room, Egbert Hall, 9 to 11 Room, Egbert Hall, 4 p.m. TheParkphotographygallerypre­ Chapel, 7:30 p.m. Junior Recital, Chad Mosher, a.m., 12 to 2 p.m. Cello, Nabenhauer, Ford Hall, 9 H&S Teacher Education, Work- sents The River's Green Margins, Math Dept., Drumming, Muller shop, Clark Lounge, Egbert Hall, 4 an exhibit by Allen Heseof Pittsford. President's Office, Luncheon, p.m. Chapel, 7:30 p.m. SMR, Egbert Hall, 12 p.m. p.m. Who's Who In American Colleges Trombone Troupe, Auditorium, Residential Life, RA Training, and Universities -applications are Rnanclal Aid, Meeting, Room 110, Wednesday, Ford Hall, 8:15 p.m. due to the Office of Campus Activi­ Phillips Hall, 1 p.m. Laub Room, Muller Chapel, 5:45 November 17 p.m. ties by 5 p.m. on Nov. 19. CC&SE/C, Dining Hall Study Area, AccounUng Club, Board Meeting, Egbert Dining Hall, 8:30 p.m. to ACS Workshops f~r IBM and Mac: NMR, Egbert Hall, 3 p.m. Life Safety Division, Training, Residential Life, AA Meeting, 12:30 a.m. Emerson Suites A, Phillips Hall, Phillips Room, Chapel, 7 p.m. Intermediate WordPerfect 5.1 Enrollment Planning, Committee 7:30a.m. (IBM), Monday, 2 to3:30p.m.; Intro IC Gerontology, "Exercise for Meeting, SMR, Egbert Hall, 3 p.m. to VAX/VMS and Electronic Mall, Friday, Admissions, Staff Meeting, Good Heath: A Community Re­ Tuesday, 4 to 5:15 p._m.; l~~uc­ Provost's Office, Human Subjects Demotta Room, Egbert Hall, 8:45 search ProlectUpdate," Audito­ tlon to lnte~~-~-¥~µ,es· November 12 Research Committee, Conference a.m., rium, ~arkHall, 1·p:m.· · · , day, 1:10 to 2:25 p.m. Advanced Room,EgMrt Hall, 3 p.m. SACL, Professional Development CC&SE/C, Marketing Meeting, Health.Management Association, registration is requked. Call 274- Meeting, SMR, Egbert Hall, 1O a.m. Campus Center, AV Manager SMR, Egbert Hall, 12 p.m. Meeting, Campus Center Meeting 3030 or stop by Muller 102 to regis­ Meeting, Demotta Room, Egbert ter. Provost's Office, APC Subcom­ Rooms, Egbert Hall, 7 p.m. Hall, 5p.m. · CC&SE, Sum~e.r c;:onference mittee Meeting, Conference Room, Meeting, Conference Room, Egbert Hall, 10 a.m. Student Government Associa­ Egbert Hall, 1:30 p.m. tion, Executive Board Meeting, Shabbat Service, Muller Chapel, 6 CAMPUS CLUBS & ORGANIZATIONS Conference Room, Egbert Hall, 7 Student Affairs, Campus Life p.m. p.m. Meeting, Demotta Room, Egbert Shabbat Dinner, Terrace Dining Hall,3p.m. Accounting Club, NMR, Egbert Hall, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Catholic Community Parish Hall, 7:15 p.m. Council, Laub Room, Muller CA&O/CC&SE, Meeting, Confer­ Ages Gerontology Group, Demotta Room, Egbert Hall, Thursday, Faculty Trombone Recital, Harold Chapel, 7:30 p.m. ence Room, Egbert Hall, 4 p.m. 8:30p.m. • Reynolds, Ford Hall, 8:15 p.m. AMA, Rape Education Committee, VPSACL, Drug and Alcohol Conference Room, Tuesday and Thursday 12 p.m. Workgroup, Demotta Room, "Date at Eight," Muller Chapel, 8 BIGALA, South Meeting Room, Egbert Hall, Sunday, 6:30 p.m. p.m. Egbert Hall, 4 p.m. Saturday, BOC, DeMotte Room, Egbert Hall, Monday, 8 p.m. Faculty Trumpet and Piano Re­ CC&SE/C, Manager Meeting, November 13 SMR, Egbert Hall, 5 p.m. Campus Crusade for Christ, Demotta Room, Egbert Hall, Wednesday, cital, Frank Campos and Diane 6:30 p.m. Continuing Education, ACSM Birr, FordHall, 8:15 p.m. H&S, Faculty Presentation, Clark Conference, Conference Hoom, College Independents , Friends 209, Wednesday, 7 p.m. CC&SE/C, Dining Hall Study Area, Lounge, Egbert Hall, 5 p.m. Egbert Hall, 7 a.m. Dayspring, North Meeting Room, Egbert Hall, Thursday, 7 p.m. Egbert Dining Hall, 8:30 p.m. to CC&SE/C, 12 Step Meeting OA, Admissions, Saturday Open 12:30 a.m. Laub and Phillips Room, Muller Delta Phi Zeta, 1st Floor Lounge, Terrace 1, Sunday, 6 p.m. House, Campus Center, 7:30 a.m. Chapel, 6 p.m. to4 p.m. Habltet for Humanity, Room 110, Phillips Hall, Thursday, 6 p.m. Tuesday, Voices Unlimited, Meeting, Room HIiiei, Laub Room, Muller Chapel, Sunday, 4:~0 p.m. Choral Composition Competition 110, Egbert Hall, 6:30 p.m. Concert, Auditorium, Ford Hall, 7 November 16 ~lstory Club, Friends 304, Monday, 7 p.m. p.m. Protestant Community, Blble Interfaith Religious Council, Meet­ Study, Muller Chapel, 6:30 p.m. IC Asian American Student Organization, South Meeting Room, Amani Singers, Fall Gospel Con­ ing, Laub and Phillips Room, Muller Egbert Hall, Thursday, 6 p.m. CSN (HELP), Weekly Meeting, cert, Emerson Suites, Phillips Hall, Chapel, 12 p.m. IC Environmental Society, NMR, Egbert Hall, Tuesday, 8 p.m. 8p.m. Conference Room, Egbert Hall, 7 Handwerker Gallery Talk, Nancy p.m. IC Republicans, South Meeting Room, Egbert Hall, Thursday, 8:30 p.m. Break, 12:10 p.m. Sunday, Math Dept., Drumming, Muller International Business Association, Room 208, Friends Hall, Mon­ Campus Center, Set-Up Meeting, · Chapel, 7:30 p.m. day, 7p.m. November 14 Emerson 8, Phillips Hall, 12:15p.m. Campus Center, AV Meeting, International Club, Demotta Room, Egbert Hall, Tuesday, 8 p.m. Admlsalons, Campus Visit; OMA-Conference, NMR, SMR, SMR, Room 110, Phillips Hall, 8 p.m. Mu Phi Epsilon, Terrace 12 Lounge, Sunday, 9 p.m. Egbert Hall, 12:30 p.m. Conference Room, Egbert Hall, 9 J.O.Y. Fellowship Meeting, Laub OMA, Demotta Room, Thursday, 9 a.m.; Conference Room, Egbert Hall, a.m. to 4 p.m. SACL • Rape Education Commit­ Room, Muller Chapel, 8 p.m. Friday, 1 p.m. tee, Demotta Room, Egbert Hall, 3 Catholic Community Mass, Muller Wind Ensemble, Ford Hall, 8:15 RHA Meeting, SMR, Egbert Hall, Wednesday, 8 p.m. Chapel, 10 a.m., 1 and 9 p.m. p.m. p.m. SAB, Academic Success Serles, Man­ North Meeting Room, Egbert Hall, Tuesday, 12 p.m. Protestant Community Services, SGA, Budget Committee Meet­ Muller Chapel, 11 :30 a.m. aging Academic Anxiety, Confer­ SASP Meeting, SMR, Egbert Hall, Monday, 6 p.m. ence Room,Counseling Center, ing, Conference Room, Egbert Hall, SAVAW, Room 102, Friends Hall, Tuesday, 8:30 p.m. Junior Voice Recital, Jennifer 3:30p.m. 8:15p.m. Weigand, Nabenhauer, Ford Hall, SGA, North Meeting Room, Egbert Hall, Tuesday, 8:15 p.m. Provoet'e HSR Meeting, cc•SE/C, Dining Hall Study 1 p.m. Office, Conference Room, Egbert Hall, 4 Ar9a, Egbert Dining Hall, 8:30 p.m. Sign _Language Club, Laub Room, Muller Chapel, Tuesday, Elective Graduate Recital, p.m. to 12:30am. 7p.m• ., Lorrane Adams, Muller Ch~I. StudentAflalra, All College Health Zeitgeist, Friends 202, Tuesday, 8 p.m. 4:30p.m. November 11, 1993 THE ITHACAN 15 ACCENT IC and MTV Silver screen student IC theater major gets his foot in the door Students pay 'Lip Service' was also working on the film, Sceflt By Lauren Stanforth different videos, from different of a Woman. Consequently, this By Matt Roberts Ithacan staff performers, are strung together relationship allowed Meier to try Ithacan Staff to form a menacing mix of hits IC sophomore Seth Meier de­ out for the lead role of Scent of a Billy Joel, Michael Jackson, that teams must lip-sync and cided to post flyers around the Park Woman with actor Al Pacino. "He Mariah Carey, and many other dance to. School of Communications earlier was always in character," Meier performers once dreamed of be­ The challenge comes when this semester, stating his interest in said of Pacino. "I really didn't get to ing stars. As children, they prob­ the music mixers at MTV change working as an actor in student films hang out with Al Paci no, but he was ably stood in front of a mirror, the tune and expect contestants and listing his credentials. very professional and wasn't look­ hairbrush in to follow. For To the general disbelief of many ing for anyone to kiss his ass." hand, and pre­ each new song, a students, Meier claimed to have Meier played a bellhop in Home tended to sing different team acted in feature films such as School Alone 2. This led to Meier taking tunes by other member must Ties and Scent ofa Woman. Though Macaulay Culkin bowling. "He's music legends. take the stage it may appear Meier was using these just a normal, spoiled little kid," Now Ithaca and keep it in big name movies as a ploy to get Meier said about Culkin. College students sync. According casted in a student film, every last As a departure from acting work, .. ) who dream of to Lip Service word is true. Meier allowed himself to experi­ the spotlight can Contestant Su­ "It was wicked dumb luck," ence another section of the film perform the pervisor Lisi Meier said regarding how he got business. Meier was selected as a Seth Meier songs of some of Gottlieb, "If [contestants] don't into the movie business. "I origi­ stunt double for the un-released son," Meier said. "I am learning a their music idols by receiving a know [the words to the song] nally wanted to be an animator, but movie Karate Kid JV. "The lead lot about experience and making little "Lip Service." they have to fake it." I always acted on the side." female character had to pretend to myself more comfortable on Tomorrow at 8 p.m., the What kind of songs do people Meier started dealing with show kick me in the stomach," Meier screen." syncing begins in the Pub/Cof­ get to sing to? Associate Pro­ business after his appearance in a said. "I got the stunt guy part basi­ Meier did secure a part in the feehouse when MTV comes to ducer Laurie Ulster said, "We Super Soaker commercial when he cally because I took a stage combat television drama "Law and Order," Ithaca College. Auditions for the play stuff that's on the channel was 12 years-old. And although class at Ithaca." but during the final cut, Meier's program "Lip Service" will show all the time." The songs are Meier didn't start working on films The two most embarrassing part was deleted. "Me and my who are the best music mockers picked by the show staff so the until the tender age of 17, he can screen moments for Meier occurred friends sat down to watch it, and on campus and give them a contestants won't know what recount some interesting events that during the filming of School Ties. then the credits came up. I thought, chance to duke it out on televi­ they are going to be performing, have happened on movie sets. "I had to be naked in a shower 'Well I guess I wasn't in it."' sion with other winners from Gottlieb said. For example, the inside of many stall for eight hours one day," Meier Currently, Meier is performing around the nation. Once teams have survived of the dorms in School Ties were said. "Everyone was looking at my in six different roles in Ithaca The rules seem simple enough round one, they must venture actually renovated racquetball butt. But they paid me extra for College's production of"The Best _- lip-syncing to some of the into round two. In past years, the courts the movie company had that." Little Whorehouse in Texas" and is most popular videos currently second round has been a role bought from an old health club. "Another time during School working on an IC student directed being shown on MTV. Except, reversal where the contestants "We could see fake trees set up Ties, there was a big party scene, film entitled Johnny Hollywood. the organizers at MTV have sing, and the artists lip sync. For outside the window," Meier said. and I fell and slipped right in front But Meier is not going to com­ added a few twists to make it example, while the audience sees "Hollywood does a lot of stuffwhen ofthecamera,"Meierrecalled. "The pletely abandon the film industry ·· ·rtrore'ntteresting;~·'·' · · ,· ·• · ·' · a video of ,t\,tl, R<>S«r- thqy.- Qeat: . they are forced to." director said, 'Who's the idiot who while attending IC. He has a screen First, you can't go solo. Com­ one of the team members trymg Movie making can be deceiving fell in front-of the c~ra?"' test for another prep school part petitors must be teams consist­ their best to sing in sync. in other ways as well. "None of the Alloftheseexperiencesoccurred sometime this fall and is trying to ing of three or five members. This season, round two is guys in [School Ties] could catch a while Meier was an extra during go to New York City once a month The competition takes place changing. According to Ulster, football," Meier said. The camera filming. But even though Meier has to search for a new agent. in three rounds. the new round will allow each shot close-ups so they could throw yet to utter a line on screen, there is "I still have a lot to learn in college, especially by watching my Round one is called the group to pick two songs from the ball from a short distance." a lot more to movie making than While shooting School Ties, what the audience sees. peers," Meier said. "Besides, col­ "Deadly Medky." In this round, :· See ''MTV," next page Meier met the casting director who "I wasn't just a background per- lege is fun." ...... Contemporary concert AccL\T os ... Paul Winter Consort explores 'earth music' John Stanton Registrar piano, said John White, professor According to "Down Beat" By Kelly Rohrer of music theory in the Ithaca Col­ magazine, Winter's feeling for the •Year began working at and Emily Carr lege School of Music. "Along with earth is elemental in his music. Yet Ithaca: 1974 Ithacan Accent Editors that, there's a concern for shaping he's somewhat disheartened that •Born: August 7, 1936; the media seems interested more in If music could be categorized beautiful tone." Plattsburgh, NY according to the subject matter it his novelty or only in the causes Winter's music is beyond cat­ •Accomplishment you addresses, the music of the Paul egory, or it was until the phrase that surround his music - his re­ Winter could be easily referred to "New Age" came along. Now Win­ cordings of whale and wolf and are most proud of: My as "earth music." ter is lumped along with the musi­ bird songs, his performing at the family Yet Winter's music cannot be cians of the Windham Hill record United Nations for World Environ­ •What would you be ment Day in 1984, his working for neatly pigeonholed. label and others. doing if you weren't a On Sunday, Nov. 14, The Paul And even though Winter him­ peace with Russia through music staff employee at IC: The Ithacan/Christy Ayers Winter Consort will visit Ithaca self does not feel his music is able to - than with his music itself. College as part of its 1993-1994 be categorized, when pushed to give "It's so much more intriguing Working at another a movie: Tim Conway "Instrumental Virtuosi" concert an answer, he tells people it's "Con­ for journalists to talk about wolves college as a registrar or •What TV show you series. temporary Contrapuntal Connecti­ and whales or going to Russia, but be involoved in retailing wouldn't miss: most these are just things we're enthused The Consort, consisting of so­ cut Country Consort Music." somewhere •Three things that can prano saxophonist Winter and the "[Winter's music] transcends about, that happen to be reflected in the music. Most pop music is based •Secret vice: Eat too always be found in your two other members of his renowned categories. It combines a number of on people's enthusiasm for their Consort - Eugene Friesen, vio­ traditions, not only sounds, but a much refrigerator: Milk, orange loncello, Glen Velez, percussion, certain aesthetic that gives mean­ lovers. It's really no different to be •Three words that juice, fruits enthused about the Grand Canyon. - have fused jazz, classical, and ing to those sounds ... He's combin­ describe me: Organized, •Ithaca's best kept What I'm most interested in is the folk music to create an almost ex­ ing traditional and aesthetic fea­ music itself," Winter said. caring, changeable secret: The Ithaca area perimental sound. tures from the western classical tra­ White agrees. "A lot of people •What I'd like to get is a great place to live "I've always regarded the Con­ dition, the jazz tradition and ethnic deliver more message than music around to doing: Writing sort as a garden in which you plant tradition,"White said. •Your biggest pet peeve - the message oveqmwers the seeds - all these instruments and "He was there when the New a book about what goes about Ithaca: Too many musical features. With Paul Win­ new pieces, seeds of melodies and Age Movement coalesced - his on inside education people at IC are not ter, the message doesn't overpower .., rhythms - and see what grows," music is a result of disregarding the music. It's of a quality high •Things you can do primarily concerned Winter said in an interview with boundaries -exploring lots of tra­ enough to interest people beyond without: Pettiness about educating our Down Beat magazine. ditions," White said. the level of message." Consorts are chamber ensembles While exploring different musi­ •Person you'd most like students The Paul Winter Consort has that originated in 17th century cal boundaries, Winter was also to have dinner with: •People may be toured the world since its inception England .. "A core of the Consort influenced by a variety of topics Larry King surprised to know that in 1967, and its members have been has always consisted ofinstruments mainly related to nature, and man's artists-in-residence at the world's •Who would play you in I: Am a grandfather coming out of the western classical relationship to the earth and to one See "Concert," next page tradition," such as the cello and another. 16 THE ITHACAN November 11 1993 'Whorehouse' full of foot-stomping fun of the sheriffs rough, emotional make the audience feel like they're Governor, played by Scott Earle By Douglas McKinney personality. watching the big college game from '95, does a tight, humorous dance, Ithacan Contributor I REVIEW I It is unfortunate that director their living rooms. Unfortunately, sidestepping reporters' questions. Choreographer Mary Corsaro using Texas accents while singing, Greg Bostwick did not take advan­ the first six or so rows of the audi­ The crowd favorite was "The Aggie and Musical Director Beverly the acting of the IC students is gen­ tage of the character's professional ence can't see them very well, if at Song," done in foot-stomping coun­ Patton have a lot to be proud of in erally solid, though not fantastic. and personal conflict of interest as all, and several more rows can't try tradition by the Texas A&M Ithaca College's las test musical pro­ Every character is portrayed an opportunity for more meaning­ take them in simultaneously with University "Aggie" football team duction offering a "wild ride" well, but none of the performances ful interaction among the cast. What the action onstage. members Jon Ponzio '96, Joey through a socio-political commen­ really stand out. The central char­ develops between Sheriff Dodd and Technical problems also occured Goldstein '96, Victor Wallace '95, tary. acters of the play, including Miss Mona, however, is skillfully with the actors' microphones on Ricky Cortez '97, Scott Earle, Sage "The Best Little Whorehouse in Dlugach' s Miss Mona, Jesse Bush's done. Jewel's ability to stand out Tuesday, opening night, to the point Crum '95, Britt Freund '94, Mark Texas," directed by Greg Bostwick, ( '95) Sheriff Ed Earl Dodd, Camille somewhat comes from Camille that the music occasionally drowned Price '96, and Seth Meier '96. derives its greatest strengths from Atkinson's ( '97) Jewel, and Atkinson's portrayal of exuberance out an individual voice. "Aggie" member Freund's all-pro flashy, foot-stomping song and Silverman's Melvin P. Thorpe, are and deep feeling, whether of loy­ There were no problems with tap dancing undoubtedly was the dance numbers. Co-produced by portrayed capably. alty, humor, or Jove for her man. the music and singing. Working best footwork of the night. the IC Theatre Department and the Dlugach pulls off a fine balance Technically, "Whorehouse" is with Patton, assistant musical di­ This production of "The Best School of Music, this production between confidence and vulnerabil­ mostly quite satisfying. rectors Joseph R. Olefirowicz '94 Little Whorehouse in Texas" may follows a tradition of excellent ity, as Miss Mona keeps up a busi­ The set is elaborate, with wooden and Kimberly Scott '95 produced have brought up debate over its musical theatre at the College. ness face in public, yet shows her stairs leading from either side of the an authentic country sound. favorable portrayal of prostitutes, With that in mind, it would be a humanity in more private scenes. stage up to the middle of a second_ The Rio Grande Band members but it's still basically a "rip-roaring real stretch to say that Thorpe comes across perfectly as floor, where the girls' beds are. adapted perfectly for what Bostwick good time," as one of its flamboy­ "Whorehouse" is one of the best. the stereotypical flashy, manipula­ Wood banisters and railings give called IC's first "country musical." ant Texan characters might say. The story, though a fairly simple tive, media religious leader and the feel of a large old house. Trans­ The singing was also superb, "Whorehouse," does rely heavily u,ic, addresses politicians' hypoc­ mo~al "watchdog," thanks to lucent blinds add a touch of privacy especially Atkinson's on "Twenty­ on the strength of its musical num­ risy, the power of the media, and Silverman'scrouched,sly body lan­ to the delightfully farcical sex four Hours of Lovin." Cafe owner bers, to the point that the characters human dignity. guage and self-assured strut. A cur­ scenes. Doatsey Mac, solidly played by tend to get ignored. The audience is Set in Texas in 1975, the play mudgeonly frown also goes a long Additions such as circular Mandy Kaplan '96, croons the re­ left wanting more character inter­ tells the partially fact-based story way to make his face look older. couches, classic-style blue cafe freshing ballad "Doatscy Mae," and actions, but the show is still a suc­ of a I SO-year-old bordello called The two most convincing char­ counter with stools, and a hanging Bush puts sincere feeling behind cess. the Chicken Ranch. The establish­ acters arc Jewel, Miss Mona's courthouse background vary the the sheriffs "Good Old Girl." ""Whorehouse" is playing at the ment, run by Miss Mona Stangley sturdy right hand, and Sheriff Ed surroundings just enough, while a The choreography was also Hoernei: Theatre from Tuesday, (April Dlugach '94) who catered to Earl Dodd, who is put in the tough huge Texan flag remains hung beautiful and effective, as the re­ Nov. 9 to Saturday, Nov. 13 with a politician!> and peasants alike, is position of being an officer of the across the back wall. sult of Corsaro and her assistants' 2:30 p.m. matinee on Saturday. abruptly closed down by the efforts law as well as Miss Mona's friend Two television monitors on ei­ (Katie Plummer '94 and Mark Price The box office is open from noon of Melvin P. Thorpe, televangelist and lover. Bush doesn't overact ther side of the audience help estab­ '95) work. The first number of Act to 5 p.m. Monday - Friday. For (Michael Silverman '95). Dodd's curses and tantrums, but lish the feel of a studio during Two, "The Sidestep" serves as a information the box office at 274- Despite the added difficulty of instead plays them as a natural part Thorpe's.TV broadcast scene, and commentary on politicians as the 3224. Concert Continued from previous page recording studio. Ticket Info largest Gothic cathedral - New To coincide with the 20th Anni­ York's Cathedral of St. John the versary of Earth Day 1990, Paul Tickets for the perfor­ Divine - since 1980. Winter released Earth, Voices of a mance at 8:15 p.m. in the The ensemble has recorded a Planet Ford Hall Auditorium are number of albums, and one of its Down Beat magazine stated that available at the DeWitt earliest, Road, was carried to the just by playing music Paul Winter Mall Ticket Center (273- moon aboard Apollo 15 in 1971 is renewed. 4497), Rebop Records in (two lunar craters were named for "Music has turned out for me to Collegetown (273-0737) songs on the album). be a passport to the world, to con­ and the Dillingham box A year later, the Consort released nect with people in ways that never office at Ithaca College Icarus, produced by the Beatles pro­ occur as a tourist and the greatest (274-3324). ducer, George Martin, who called it thing we can do is encourage people Prices for single "the finest album I ever made." to make music. When people make tickets are as follows: In 1985 Winter's Living Music music they' re more integrated, more • $7 for children, senior label released Canyon, which connected to each other and to the citizens, IC students; quickly rose to number four on the earth than from any other activity. • $12 for IC alumni, jazz charts and spawned a one-hour Music is one of the great hoped for faculty, staff, and admin­ special which was televised nation­ the human species," Winter said. istration, Friends of ally on PBS. The ensemble's appearance on Ithaca College, other To record the album, the Con­ South Hill headlines an Ithaca Col­ students Photo courtesy of Deb Vialet sort rafted down the Colorado River lege Concerts season lineup that • $14 for general public. Winter and his musical friends have often journeyed down the three times to use the Grand Can­ will also feature performances by For more information, Colorado River In order to make music In the "Cathedral of the yon - called the "Cathedral of the the Summit Brass and the Vermeer call 274-3171. Earth," - the Grand Canyon -whose natural studio was the Earth" - as a naturally created Quartet. setting for the Consort's 1985 album, Canyon. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • MTV------• TAKE CARE OF YOURSELF AND YOUR PARTNER • continued from previous page That answer comes from Celebrity Groups that are overall winners • • one artist. The battle will go "back Booker Abby Gans. There are three of the entire competition will be • PROTECTION AGAINST SEXUALLY • • • and forth from one team to the celebrity judges who oversee, and invited back to compete.in the "Lip • TRANSMITTED DISEASES (STDs} • other," Ulster said. For example, grade, the quality of the perfor­ Service" playoffs. • • one group would sync to Van Halen mances. The very talented, or very lucky, • Condoms are available at the Ithaca College • • • then the other group would sync to According to Gans, this season's will get a chance to compete in the • Health Center Medication Room • Aerosmith . They continue their ''Lip Service" will be graced by finals and qualify to win the grand • 6 for $1.00 • duel seein who can out do each some of the following judges: prize, a lip-sync . video made by • • other. Ulster said, "It's like a battle "Saved By the Bell's" Marc-Paul MTV video producers and aired on • During regular clinic hours 8am to 4pm • • • of the bands." Gossclaar, Josie Bisset from MTV. • CASH IS ACCEPTABLE • Last, but not least, is round three, ''Melrose Place," and Jenna Von Ithaca students can see their • • better known as "Scratch Factor." Oy who plays Six on "Blossom," to friends compete on "Lip Service" ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• This is the only round ·where teams name a few. on MTV, Monday through Friday at Rogan's Corner are allowed to pick their own song. These judges grade the perfor­ at 4:30 pm. Or, they can opt for a Before the competition, they are mances of the teams after each live performance and root their closest to J.C.! allowed to choreograph a dance round. Each judge covers a differ­ friends on at the "Lip Service" stu­ 277-TANS routine, and sync to their choice. ent category: Accuracy - how well dios in Queens in New York City. (277-8267) Of course, MTV would not Jet groups lip-sync and sing to the vid­ Don't have the money to buy contestants get away that easily - eos, Body Mechanics - how well tickets for "Lip Service?" No need MUST BRING IN COUPON the "Lip Service" DJ has control of teams shake their "boo tie", and a to worry, tickets are free. To sup­ the music. new category, Sass - which rates a port a fellow ICer just call the audi­ .- --;-i.ooOFF-7s:,;~ N:i Specia1l Last season's DJ was Spindarella team's boldness. ence hotlines at (212) 408-8528 and I Shampoo, , I $35.00 I from the group Salt 'N' Pepa. This Sass, according to Ulster is, "our reserve some seats. season it is going to be Money equivalent of chutzpa" Though the staff tries to accom­ : Cut & Blow-dry I regularly $40.00 I (pronounced MOE-NEE) Love. The highest cumulative score modate all spectators who know 1 expires Nov. 19th J.. expires Nov. 19th 1 "She's very fun, she'll be very nasty determines the winner of each people on the teams, Ulster recom­ ~------~ with the scratching," Ulster said. round. Winning teams are awarded mends that they play it safe and I TANNING SPECIAL I It is up to her to scratch it, slow prizes. The prizes for rounds one reserve their seats in advance. I 6 Sessions For $25.00 I the music down, speed it up, play it and two range anywhere from bi­ "It's a fun day in the studio," I ______NEW WOLFF._. ______BULBS _ I backward, whatever she desires. cycles to stereos. The award for Ulster said. This is the last season exoires Nov. 19th .J But how does· MTV pick the winning round three is a trip for the for "Lip Service" and "we're going L winners of this heated competition? teammates. out with a blast," she added. November 11, 1993 THE ITHACAN 17

MOVIE LISTINGS Fanaticism in the family November 12 - 18 Actors shine in humorous yarn about religion Cinemapolis 2TT-6115 By Brad Barton Ithacan Staff Un Coeur En Hlver - Daily at 9:35 As Like Water for Chocolate, Nancy MOVIE REVIEW The Wedding Banquet Household Saints - Daily at 7:00, 9:35 Savoca's Household Saints features cinema­ Rating:7 The Wedding Banquet - Daily at 7:15 tography that affectionately treats food as if it Household • An entertaining independent comedy about a homosexual man who has to juggle were a pivotal cast member. Savoca lovingly Saints many different comedic scenarios involving Fall Creek 272-1256 lingers over the food which is complexly Directed by Nancy Savoca his parents, his gay lover and his "wife," Into the West - Sat. and Sun. at 2:15, 4:35 entwined with the characters Ii ves. Of course, whom he marries in order to appease his Manhattan Murder Mystery- Daily at 7:15, 9:35 the film does have more going for it than The Ithacan rates movies on a scale from 1 to 10, parents. This "comedy" manages to raise simply a beautifully shot menu, resulting in with 1O being the best serious issues about homosexuality and how King Hill- Daily at 7:15 of the an entertaining and affecting story. 11 affects the relationships in a family. Like Water For Chocolate - Daily at 9:35 Vincent D'Onofrio is Joseph Santangelo, their lives accordingly. Intelligent and witty. Gettysburg - Daily at 7:00 a butcher in New York's Little Italy strug­ But Ullman and D'Onofrio realize that King ofthe Hill gling through the summer of 1949 by playing they aren't necessarily the main character~. Rating:9 State Theatre · 273-2781 cards with his friends. As the players get more and allow Taylor to take center stage. They' re • This story of one child's methods of drunk and the stakes grow higher, Joseph reduced to typical parental supporting roles, Rudy - Daily at 7:00, 9:30 survival during the depression Is both clever wins an opponent's daughter: Catherine but the two imbue Catherine and Joseph with in its observations about the social interac­ Demolition Man "".' Daily at 7:00, 9:30 Falconetti, played by Tracey Ullman. a richness of character that still allows them tions between children and a somber penod The two actually hit it off and are married, to be an active clement. piece about the realities of hard limes. Hoyt's Pyramid Mall 257-2700 much to the chagrin ofJoseph's widow mother, Judith Malina deserves an Oscar nomina­ Although the tone of the ending doesn't Carmela, played by Judith Malina. tion at least forhersupportingrolcasCarmela. really match the rest of the film, 11 Is still an Call theatre for showtlmes A frequently tense co-habitation for the The living embodiment of pessimism, Malina extraord1nanly effect1ve work. Carlito's Way three results from Carmela's supersti­ docs nothing to improve the image of moth­ Rookie of the Year The Three Musketeers tion and Catholicism. But with the birth of ers-in-law. She utters her dialogue with such 7 Joseph and Catherine's daughter, Teresa, delightful revulsion she becomes likeable in Rating: Cool Runnings • Darnel Stem's directing debut is a zippy, " played by Lili Taylor, the film switches gears her meanness. Look Wh_o's Talking Now zany Journey through a 12 year old's dream to focus on their religion-obsessed child. Taylor gives a great performance of sub­ The Nightmare Before Christmas of playing major league baseball. Thomas Without any familial influence, Teresa dued emotion as Teresa. Rarely does Taylor Ian Nicholas gives a bnght-eyed, cute The Joy Luck Club devotes every thought, word and deed to God speak above a timid whisper, but everything pertomiance as the boy, and Stem h1msell Fearless as her parents become concerned about what she needs to say is conveyed via her thoughts does a wacky tum as one of his teammates, My Life they consider to be an unhealthy obsession. and diary entries, both revealed through her and the film effectively incorporates cameos Perhaps most impressive is the way the emphatic voice-over. from many real-life baseball heroes. Cornell Cinema 255-3522 screenplay is able to discount Catholicism to Granted, the film is not entirely engross­ such a degree, but at the same time subse­ ing, and the Catholic fanaticism is more often Raiders of the Lost Ark-Thu. at 10:45, Tue. ManhaUan Murder Mystery quently portray how it could be a genuinely distancing than engaging. But Savoca brings Rating:9 atto:00 powerful influence for some Roman Catho­ a refreshing uniqueness to the screen with an • Woody Allen's return to comedy is a Superfly - Fri. at 11 :00, Mon. at 9:15 lics. For example, Carmela relies on her reli­ attention to visual design and shot composi­ welcome surprise, a tale that tries to mix Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs - Fri. at gion to such a laughable extent that she burns tion that is integral to the film, without be­ suspense with comedy and succeeds with 7:15, Sat. at 6:35, Sun. at 4:30 her religious icons when prayers regarding coming heavy-handed and obvious. flying colors. It also marks the return of her family "go unheeded." Hertcchniqueisdistinguished by a linger­ Allen's best comedic partner, Diane Keaton, SAB Weekend Films 274-3383 Ullman and D'Onofrio are entertaining ing adoration of the household items and the and their teamwork is right on the money. caricatures of the denizens of Little Italy. food preparation important to the Italian­ Simple, funny, entertaining. Both refuse to be completely likable and American family. Another Stakeout - Fri. and Sat. at 7:00, 9:30 Compiled by Garrick Dion, Lauren neither is the ideal spouse for the other, yet All of these factors combine to produce a Rookie of the Year - Sun. at 7:00, 9:00, 11 :00 Stanforth, and Todd Williams. they accept the cards they're dealt and adjust well-crafted and touching film.

~ -

ATTENTION. . RESIDENTS ...... , There will not be an off-campus housing application process during the Fall 1993 semester for Janu~ry 1994 releases.

Current resident students-who wish to move off-campus may apply during the Spring semester (1994) lottery process for permission to move off-campus the following fall. The application process will be advertised in The Ithacan, in the 1994-1995 Lottery Brochure mailed to all residents in February, and on residence hall bulletin boards. Students are advised not to sign any lease or contract, or make other commitments for off-campus housing, prior to receiving written approval to move off-campus from the Office of Residential Life through the application process.

Information relative to the College's residency policy is contained in the Undergraduate Catalog .. page 13 and the .Residential Life Handbook, page 4 7. Specific questions about housing may be addressed to members of the Residential Life Department staff. 18 THE ITHACAN NtW\hber-H,-:l993 CLASSIFIEDS/COMICS

Shannon & Ilana- Thank you for all garage. Available: June '94 to May 3 BEDROOM OR 6 BEDROOM Denham Springs, LA 70727-1779. PERSONAL '95 Walk to I.C. Call 273-3054. of your hard work. Saturday was LOVELY FURNISHED APART­ SPRING BREAK '94 Earn Cash, Hello McFly ! ! Anybody in there?? great! Love & SSf- The Sisters of Second Semester: M/F Housemate MENT Living room, dining room, FREE Trips, and Year Round Travel Who would have guessed? Thanks DPZ wanted for coed. 5 bedroom house. balcony, dishwasher, microwave, Discounts through the East Coasts just down the hill from campus, forcverything-espccially 4:30 a.m. Happy Anniversary, Jennifer. It's_ $285 plus utilities. 2 kitchens/ 2 leaderof Ski and Spring Break Des­ near the Commons. Bus and park­ Princess been a great two years!! Love, Bill baths. Large bedroom. Parking tinations. Call EPICUREAN available. 315 Hillview Place. Con­ ing available. $285 per person. TOURS Today!! (800) 231-4-FUN ESQ- Three words: Road trip Janu­ tact: Melissa 275-8161. August '94. 272-7891, ask for Mary. ary '94! Love & SSF, Me FOR RENT Earn $500 - $1000 weekly stuffing One room for rent in four bedroom SOUTH HILL Newly remodeled envelopes. For details- RUSH $1.00 Kipper- Congrats little sis! You arc Great Location: Modern new con­ struction. 6 bedrooms, 2 kitchens, 2 house adjacent to Ithaca College (5) furnished bedroom apartments­ with SASE to: GROUP AVE 57 awesome. I am proud to say you arc entrance, 242 Coddington Rd. 272- off street parking, laundry, secu­ Greentree Drive, Suite 307 Dover, my sister! Love & SSF- Stewy full & 2 balf baths, private off street parking. Available: June '94 to May 1489, Available Dec.I. rity/ intercom system, convenient DE 19901 to campus and downtown. Avail­ Pucker- You are a beautiful person '95. Walk to I.C.-Call 273-3054. '94-'95, 6 People house, 2 kitchen, CRUISE SHIP JOBS! Students and a wonderful friend. Thank you able now and next semester or '94 - Great Location: 4 bedroom house 2 bathroom, 2 living room, 6 park­ '95 school year. Call now - 273- needed! Earn $2000+ monthly. for just being you! Love & SSF­ ing, laundry, $325 includes. 272- Summer/ holidays/ fulltime. World Stewy with 2 baths, washer, dryer, micro­ 5370. wave, private off street parking & 113 I. travel. Caribbean, Hawaii, Europe, Unusual Contemporary Townhouse Mexico. Tour Guides, Gift Shop Four bedroom houses, townhouses, 3/4 large bedrooms, 2 baths, skylit Sales, Deck Hands, Casino Work­ apartments available in June and entry, balcony, walled garden, free ers, etc. No experience necessary. August, quality housing, great lo­ heated garage. Pel<; allowed. Walk CALL 602-688-4647, Ext. Cl47. TOWNHOUSES / APTS. cations, walk to campus. 277-8197 to Cornell, IC, Commons, buses. $1100.00. 257-7077. CRUISE SHIPS NOW HIRING - •• 3 BEDROOM LOVELY FUR­ Earn up to $2000+/month + world FOR RENT- '93 - '94 NISHED APARTMENT Living TOWNHOMES- 3 or4 bedrooms I travel (Hawaii, Mexico, the room, dining room, balcony, dish­ I /2 baths, available August '94. Carribean, etc.) Summer, and Ca­ washer, microwave, just down the • 3-4 BEDROOMS Near IC & downtown on Private St. reer employment available. No ex­ hill from campus, near the Com­ Spacious rooms with nice furni­ perience necessary. For more in­ • DISHWASHER, WASHER/DRYER mons. Bus and parking available. ture. Free parking, washer/dryer, formation call l-206-634-0468 ext. $285 per person. August '94. 272- IN EACH UNIT dishwasher, porches, patios. Call C5231. 7891, ask for Mary. Nick 277-3133 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. or ,r "' • LOTS OF PARKING 4 Bedroom furnished. 405 South 273-6142 JO a.m. - 8 p.m. NOTICES Albany St. Includes heat, hot water, Furnished Houses close to I.C. 3-6 An ECK Worship Service will be • PRIME LOCATION T.V., cable, and off street parking. Bedrooms. 272-6016 or 273-4211. held on Sunday November 14th $350 per bedroom. Maximum 4 (11 :00 a.m.) at the Sheraton Inn, • PLEASANT LIVING people. 12 month lease. Available • FOR SALE Ithaca. Topic 'God, the Master CONDITIONS January or June. Painter' SNOWBOARD- Burton MS, '93, GREAT LOCATIONS! GREAT great condition, $390?? Call JESS ECKANKAR video 'DREAM PRICES! SOUTH HILL. EAST CALL at 275-2013. MASTER PART I' now showing HILL. DOWNTOWN. CAYUGA I 1 on Sundays.November 14th & 21st LAKE. A SELECTION OF JOB OPPORTUNITIES and December 5th at 7:00 p.m. on I I 273•0553 HOUSES AND APARTMENTS BErvVEEN 1-9 P.M. cable channel 13. I I FROM I TO 5 BEDROOMS ***FREE TRIPS & CASH!*** STARTING AT $275 WITH ALL Call us and find out how hundreds ***Party in the Sun*** UTILITIES INCLUDED. OFF of students are already earning Spring Break Jamaica, Cancun, STREET PARKING! LAUNDRY FREE TRIPS and LOTS OF CASH Bahamas, S. Padre, Florida in­ • • FACILITIES! IOAND 12MONTH with America's #1 Spring Break cluding the ultimate party package! LEASE! JAMES E. GARDNER, company! Choose Cancun, Baha­ Organize small group and travel JR. 277-3232. mas, Jamaica, Panama, Daytona or free! Lowest prices guaranteed! Call Padre! CALL NOW! TAKE A Sun Splash Tours Today 1-800- SOUTH HILL Attention Fraternities, Sororities, BREAK STUDENT TRAVEL 426-77 IO! Independents: 30 bedroom apart­ (800)328-SAVEor(617)424-8222 ment house, fully furnished, laun­ Paintball - Come play at the big­ dry facility, off street parking. 93 - SPRING BREAK 7 Nights from gest and best field in the area. Four APARTMENTS 94 school year. Days 277-5576. $299. Includes: Air, Hotel, Tran~­ playing fields, C.A. paint ritles. r· Evenings 272-1944. fers, Parties and more! NASSAU - private games. New P.A. !:.y~tem ------PARADISE ISLAND - CANCUN with sound effects. College spr­ Five bedroom apartments, fully fur­ - JAMAICA - SAN JUAN. Orga­ cial; Just buy our paint and CO,. nished, dishwasher, laundry facil­ nize a small group- Earn FREE trip Can accommodate up to 50 players. ity, 2 full baths. Days 277-5576. Modern, carpeted, furni~hed, plus commissions! 1-800-GET­ Weekend Warriors 1-796-2824. Evenings 272-1944. SUN-I. Beautiful renovated 3 and 4 bed­ GREEKS! CLUBS! RAISE UPTO parking. 1-13 bedroon1s. room apartments. Victorian, South $1,000 IN JUST ONE WEEK! For Hill, decks, laundry room and park­ your fraternity, sorority, or club. ing. Dave Christie 347-4513. Plus $1,000 for yourself! And a Rooms for rent in large, beautiful, FREE T-SHIRT just for calling. sunny, 4 bedroom apartment. Fur­ Call l-800-932-0528, ext.75. nished. Available immediately. GREEKS! CWBSI BEACH Springbreak Promoter. South Hill, parking. Freshly painted. 272-3389 Small or large groups. Yours FREE, STUDENT GROUPS! Dave 347-4513. discounted or CASH. Call CMI 1- Raise as Much as You • • 800-423-5264. Want In One Weeki $100... $600 ... $1 aoGI EARN $500 or more weekly stuff­ Sign _a lease now for a ing envelopes at home. Send along Market Applcat1ol'W IOI Citibank vau., MCI, NARI. AMOCO etc. SASE to: Country Living Shop­ pers, Dept. H4, PO Box 1779, Cal IOI your FRH T•IHIRT and to College Circle Apartment qualty 101 FRO TRIP' lo MTV IP'RING IRIAK '94. for 1994-1995. STUDENT GROUPS Cal 1-I00-932-0121. ext, 66. and ORGANIZATIONS If you don't get off campus, the only Interested in making serious moner. marketing no annual fee thing you'll have·to lose for life credit cards: I AT&T Universal MasterCard I Discover Card I is the pleasure of living at the circles! I Top Department Stores? For Mo" Details Call 118 6-7 BEDROOM HOUSE r 1, 1-800-592-2121 ON SOUTH AURORA ST. ext. 313 ti 1D-MONTH LEASE College Circle Apartments Call Today! ti FREE PARKING ti LAUNDROMAT Rent a low• $220/llanth 277-1221 ASKUSHOWTO C.UGary RECEIVE A FREE CD 273-7082·or ,. OF YOUR CHOICE 2n-1000 'llovembtr,Hvl993. THE ITHACAN 19 COMICS

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It had started off as a pleasant evening, but, as the "Oh, man! The coffee's cold! Caldwells soon discovered (too late, regrettably), It They thought of everything!" was best not to try and trump the old gypsy woman.

.. 20 THE ITHACAN November 11- 1993 COMICS

TIit-: I· \R SII>I·: · B~ (;_\I{\ L \RSO\ SUBLET Female roommate wanted for Spring '94 sublet in 2 bedroom apt. next to Commons and bus. Parking space. Very quaint. Call 275-8264. Sublet- Spring '94 Female wanted for l bedroom of 3 bedroom house downtown. 1 block from Commons and all buses. Large house with free cable T.V. and off-street parking. Call Andrea 256-4809.

SERVICES Typing/ Word Processing. Appli­ cations - Papers - Resumes - Guar­ anteed Accuracy-Often Overnight - Downtown. Prices Start $1.50/pg. 273-3421. PAPER CRUNCH TYPING Pa­ pers Resumes Applications Quick, Reasonable & Reliable Laser Printer /Macintosh Pick-Up/Delivery Call "Ooo! You're right, Sir Dwayne! If I knock right here, Douglas is ejected from the spoon band. 277-7583 I can make him start buzzing .... Ooo, and he's angry!"

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11 Smger. drc"eJ a, ,1 rep, >rtt•r. mcen·tt'W' a ,u1c1dal wnman 48 Word in Cagney 10 "Thanks --! " ACROSS phrase 11 Mussolini, et al. on a butlJmg ledge· l Disco l orat 1 ons 49 Region of India 12 Enliven 12 Smgcr\ face 1rornc.dl1 ,upenmp,isecl on face,,( r,,hot 7 - Coast (India) 50 Organization for 13 \lent backward 14 Floating structure C. Everett Koop 15 Carpentry item l, Emstem-b.,k-altke pl,1)'' ,1 vwlm 16 City in Texas 51 Prayer part 21 Nullify 17 Country 1n Africa 53 Lacking delicacy 27 Duped 14 Cm,,_,-cyc-d 1Aoman ,hnoes beer can ,,ut oi cnwh()y\ h.1nd 18 Cone i se 55 Cut 28 - Volta 15 M1hon Bt·rle ,ippe,1r, m drag 19 Prefix: mouth 56 Dug out canoe 29 Miss Garson /. 20 Very pale 58 Milk glass 30 Garden vegetables 16 An armaJ11\o rum 111 lronc ,,t .m otl well 22 Wel 1-known 60 Repeat 32 Prefix: child magazine 61 Trifling 34 Clod 17 Rnbotte arm ,l:ir, m.tnnt·yum\ head mm a whle 23 Actor Gibson 62 Mexican garb 36 Disloyalty !ti Smgmg he.id emcrgt·, lwm .i pot,,( baked bean, 24 Math concept, 63 Office workers 37 Ancient Egyptian for short god 19 S, anrtly cl.1d \\0111.111 torple, ,umo wrc,rler 25 Young boy 38 Ancient Asian 26 "Beat it!" DOWN 39 Affair need 2l' ~1cJtt'\',d ch.1r.1crt'r,. mdu,l1ng ,11111Jger, d,mcc .tround 28 Employing Tics 40 M~layan boat 30 - d'Azur 2 Mexican Indians 41 Straighten again ,I lll,l\'p<>le 31 Put the football 3 Fro-n Luanda 42 Type of class into play 4 - veto 45 Concurs 33 Stirred up 5 " ... -- iron bars 47 Badgerl i ke 35 Retained a cage" animals 36 Furniture wood 6 Begrime 52 Miss 9ayes 37 Withdraw 7 Slander 53 Good-looking 40 Favors 8 "The Story of -­ 54 Name for a dog 43 Vigor Boy" 55 Voucher 44 Less cooked 9 Official permit 57 Hiatus ~111',X\ lllJ"[ .ly .. ·.,~,11·,i: ) .. 11 ' 11'f I 46 Prophet (abbr.) 59 Miss Irving Jnlll\ll,').\ U,)l"l ·''l ..'·')UI'<_] ,'1,'Jl'S ·"LL, OZ SJl':l ·"11 ,\lj ..'·'"1(]., ,11 ul'mo m·mll .1y .:,up:1 u" 'l"i).. 61 !"Pl .1 111u .1'! .:~u,pr~,'X\ Jlll!JX\., ·o lX '!'"''/\ Ill II'' ,X\ ,lq .:,11pcu Ul')IXJj,"l., s I '1""11.Jlll'fl"J. •\lj .:.?>n>f I :llP U\\l'(J ,tnllll"tl .. s ~)n:lnJ"'U. J:iJO=>Q A<.J ,,'-'ll<'\I :itp lll !''\! .. S ,, 0/\30 .\q ,,'lj dtt!JX\ .. ·t.-1 "'!)''D J'U. ,llj ,,'U

Athlete of the Week Mike Mulligan At the New York .------State Collegiate Track and Field Association Cross­ Country Champion­ ships, senior Mike Mulligan led the Bombers to a second place finish. Mulligan placed second in the 5.2 mile race with a time of 27:37. Mulligan is a All-American and has the The Ithacan/Rena M. DiFilippo chance to be the college's first two time Ithaca's Melissa Kryz digs for the ball during the New York State Women's Colleglate Athletic Association finals against the All-American in men's cross country at Rochester Institute of Technology on Saturday, Nov. 6. Ithaca Col e. Spiking their way to second • In the Bombers football win over While the highlights were few and far at the state tournament since 1984. Cortland, quarterback Ron Smith had a between for the Bombers, junior Sindie "The kids came to play and proved that big game. He completed 10 of 21 passes Bombers swept in Shollenberger continued her solid play as they were one of the top two teams in the .for 187 yards and two touchdowns. setter, compiling 24 assists in the match. state," Grzymkowski said. "The players knew Smith is now 10th on the career passing first round of yardage list at Ithaca with 1345 yards. Junior outside hitter Lisa Black led the they had a NCAA bid riding on this." Smith, with 1, 136 yards this year, is Bombers in kills with eight. Junior outside Grzymkowski's squad opened its first having the fourth best season in Ithaca NCAAs hitter Tracy Swyers and sophomore Bonnie day of competition defeating New Paltz, 15- College history. McDowell registered five kills each. 4, l 5-0; Hunter, 15-8, 15-5 and Oswego 15- This loss marked the first time the squad 12, 11-15, 15-11. • The women's volleyball team placed By Sarah Beall has ventured to the NCAA tournament since The victorious beginning sent them into second last weekend at the New York Ithacan Staff 1987, when they also lost in the first round. the winner's bracket on Saturday, Nov. 6, State Women's Collegiate Athletic Their overall NCAA tournament record now where they defeated New York University Association Championships. Leading the Once again, the rigors of the National stands at 2-6. and Brockport. Bombers were junior hitters Lisa Black Collegiate Athletic Association tournament Gryzmkowski said she hoped this loss The championship match against RlT Find Tracy Swyers, who were named to proved too much for the Ithaca College would not lessen the importance of the rest ended the Bombers' state title hopes, as they the All-Tournament team. During the women's volleyball team. tournament, Black put down 38 Kills and of the year. "The loss docs not take away fell 10-15, 12-15. Swyer., posted 65. Black holds the IC VOLLEYBALL from the fact that we really had a great Both Swyers and Black earned spots on 'record for kills in aseason, wffile Swyers season," she said. the all-tournament team for their effort!'. at is fifth. On Wednesday, Nov. 10, the Bombers This past weekend's performance at the the Championships. fell to the Rochester Yellow Jackets, 15-8, New York State Women's Collegiate Ath­ The Empire Athletic Association honors 11 In the National Collegiate Athletic 15-5, 15-10 at Rochester. letic Association Championships gave Ithaca were announced this past week. The trio of Association Division Ill East Regional Head coach Janet Gryzmkowski said the extra push it needed to land a bid in the Black, Swyers and Shollenberger were named finals, field hockey game of the season, Rochester simply overpowered her squad. to the conference's first team. Grzymk0wski senior goalie Karen Hollands kept NCAA playoffs. Ithaca close with 18 saves in the 1-0 loss "We lost to a great team," she said. "Roches­ The squad hosted the tourney and grabbed was named EAA Coach of the Year in her to Cortland. She ends her career at ter really played well tonight." a second place finish-- Ithaca's best placing second year at the helm. Ithaca in third place in career goals ' against average of 1.27. She was also ~- number two in all-time saves with 550. Running duo thrives after summer of She notched 21 shutouts on the year, paving the way for Holland to break the IC record for career save percentage sweat preparing for 1993 campaign with .896.

By Brian Kohn Game of the Week Ithacan Sports Editor Add up the total miles Ithaca College · Men's Wrestling cross country runners Mike Mulligan and Ithaca hosts Ithaca Invitational Steve Mathias ran last summer, and one of Friday and Saturday, them could have made it to Salt Lake City, Utah. Nov.11-12, 2 p.m. · The home of the wide expanses of the salt flats are approximately 1,820 miles from # . The Bomber grapplers start the Ithaca -- the total amm,mt of miles Mulligan sea&on at Ben light Gymnasium hosting and Mathias ran over the summer in prepara­ the 11th annual Ithaca Invitational. tion for the current cross country season. Leading the Bombers are juniors Karl "Youjusthavetogooutanddoit,"Mathias Zenia and Chris Matteotti. Senior Mike said, referring to the 70 miles he ran each Murtha, one of the leaders on Ithaca's week during the summer months. "You adapt 1992-93 squad, is out for the year due to to it and become mentally tough from it." a injury. Last year, the Bombers won the While Mathias spent his summer running Ithaca Invitationals. Ithaca ended the season with a 7-9 record and placed in Ithaca, Mulligan was at home in Manlius, fourth in the to the NCAA Division Ill N.Y., running 60 miles each week. Champio_nships. "I ran a lot more miles than I have ever run during the summer," Mulligan said. "My training was much more consistent than ever Inside before. I logged more miles and I logged faster miles. I wanted to improve from last Team Reports: year and I knew I had to run a lot on to get better." Football ...... 22 BothMathiasandMulligan feel theirtrain­ Women's Soccer ...... 23 ing has paid off. Mulligan placed second at Field Hockey ...... 23 the New York State Collegiate Track & Field Mike Mulligan "'-·. Men's Cross Country ...... 23 Association Championship (NYSCT&FA) Men's Soccer ...... 24 on Saturday, Nov. 6. He also recorded a away from breaking the Ithaca College men's straight year Mathias earned all-state honors. Men's Swimming ...... 24 career best time at the Cortland Invitational cross country record. The senior co-captains have been the Women's Swimming ...... 24 on Saturday, Sept. 25. Mathias finished 10th at the NYSCT &FA Bombers' top two finishers in every race they Women's Cross Country ...... 24 At the Invitational, Mulligan completed Championships, up from his 20th place fin~ have competed in. Both runners also said Wrestting ...... 26 the five-mile race in 24:38 - one second ish of a year ago. This marks the second See "Runners," page 25 22 THE ITHACAN November 11 1993 Butterfield goes out in winning fashion- Head football coach makes his last home game a memorable one for his team and fans By Jonathan Whitboume "When I first took this job I Ithacan Staff wanted to be a winning coach, As swarms of proud Ithaca and Cortland fans filed into Jim Butterfield Stadium, the but I never expected to win Bomber football team was eagerly listening any national championships. to a pre-game speech given by head coach I'm a dreamer. I love to dream. Jim Butterfield. I consider myself lucky. I was "His [Butterfield] speech was no different from previous ones," said senior wide re­ able to live out my dreams. " ceiver Joe Palumbo. "It was as if he didn't -Jim Butterfield even know that it was his last home game." football head coach Butterfield said he did not want the play­ ers to dwell on the fact that it was his final with a big win." home game. "I just wanted us to beat The Bombers overwhelmed the Red Drag­ Cortland," Butterfield said. "I'll admit I ons ofCortland State and gave Butterfield his wanted desperately to win my last game at 206th win. More importantly, however, home, but I didn't want the kids to win just for Butterfield staged a final home victory. me. I wanted them to win for us." "I guess you could say I was relieved after The Bombers, completely dressed in navy, the game," Butterfield said. "I wanted so bad rushed into the stadium like a relentless wave. to give the seniors a win, but I can't lie, I As Ithaca stood in the end zone waiting for really wanted my last home game to be spe­ the names of senior players to be announced, cial too." dedicated fans, cloaked in down jackets and After the game clock expired, a gang of turtlenecks, screamed words of encourage­ Ithaca players hoisted Butterfield on their ment to their favorite players. shoulders and began chanting, "Butts, Butts, The Ithacan/Adam Riemer "The crowd is always wild at an Ithaca­ Butts." Butterfield looked down at his play­ Head coach Jim Butterfield Is carried put by his players after Ithaca's 32-14 victory Cortland game," said Jake Cerrone, a senior ers and then at the navy blue horizon - with over Cortland. Sunday's game was his last at home. line backer and tri-captain. "Excited fans a smile strewn across his face. psyche us up even more." "Even though I'm only a freshman, it Butterfield said he never expected to have for him."_ After the names of the 19 senior players seems that I have known Coach Butterfield such a successful coaching career. "When I The scoreboard read Ithaca 32 - Cortland were announced, the words, "Ithaca is coached for years," said fullback Justin Johnson. "It's first took this job I wanted to be a winning 14, the bleachers empty and the surroundings by Jim Butterfield," echoed throughout the hard to sum up the way I feel about him in a coach, but I never expected to win any Na­ serene. A passer-by who missed the game South Hill. "It was an emotional moment, no couple of quotes, but I know he is a great tional Championships," he said. "I'm a may have glanced at the scoreboard and question about it," Butterfield said. "I have example, both on and off the field." dreamer.I love to dream. I consider myself thought it was another win for Ithaca. Little coached so many games on that field, whether As players exchanged handshakes, lucky. I was able to live out my dreams." would he or she know that it was more than they be exhibition or season openers. I Butterfield congratulated both Ithaca and Record books will show future genera­ just a win. It was Butterfield's last stand. couldn't believe that it was going to be over." Cortland players. He then walked across the tions Butterfield's illustrious coaching ca­ "I am fortunate to have come to such a The Ithaca players said they are always frozen sod in a confident manner and shook reer. However, his players say record books great school," Butterfield said. "The players excited right before the kickoff of an Ithaca­ hands with his good friend, Cortland State will never reveal what a truly remarkable are fantastic, the fans really support us and Cortland match up, but this year their inten­ head coach Dave Murray. "I can't tell you person he is. the administration was alway·s-very positive sity was magnified. "It was a really emo­ exactly what we said to one another, because "When I first came to Ithaca I was intimi­ and helpful. I will absolutely always be an tional pre-game," Palumbo said. "There was it was very personal." Butterfield said. "I dated by Coach Butterfield," Cerrone said. Ithaca fan. I couldn't conceive not rooting for a lot of pressure to win. It was coach's last believe Dave is an outstanding coach and I "But later I realized what a great coach and the Bombers. I will always love Ithaca Col­ home game and we wanted to send him out value his opinions and advice." person he is. I am very proud to have played lege." Taking it back: Ithaca reclaims Cortaca Jug, soundly defeating arch rival Cortland, 3 2-14 Ithaca countered Cortland's By Jonathan Whitboume early attack by scoring four unan­ Ithacan Staff swered touchdowns before half­ The Ithaca Bombers slew the time. "All I saw was a bunch of blue Red Dragons of Cortland State and shirts pushing back a bunch of white gave head coach Jim Butterfield a shirts," said Justin Johnson, a fresh­ win in his final regular season home man fullback who rushed 23 times game. for 94 yards and two touchdowns before he was injured in the second FOOTBALL half. "Our line blew Cortland away and it really made my job a lot The Bombers fell behind early, easier." but were able to overcome a first With a 25-7 lead at halftime, the quarter deficit and win 32-14. Bombers were one half away from "Our main objective was to give winning the 52nd Cortaca Jug Coach Butterfield a win," said Jake match. "I was so psyched I couldn't Cerrone senior linebacker and tri­ control myself," Johnson said. "I captain. realized we were going to win and Although Cortland's record was I saw that my teammates were re­ only 1-7, their persistent offense ally excited. This pushed me to an and pesky defense allowed them to even more intensity level." ··-. stay close to Ithaca. "Cortland is However, Cortland did not give Cortland," said Butterfield. "No up without a fight. The Red Drag­ matter what their record is, they are ons opened the second half with a Photo courtesy Bill Warren, The Ithaca Journal always going to play us extremely 77-yard kickoff return by Steve Bomber quarterback Jim Betz (10) eludes a Cortland defender during Sunday's contest. tough." Ellis. After two unsuccessful rush­ The Red Dragons scored first on ing plays from the goal line, tightened, while junior running back making his first coaching decision going well for Cortland in the sec­ a 65-yard pass play from junior Berkowitz hit senior tight end Jeff Hodari Martin rounded out Ithaca's during his 18 years on the. South ond half when a Cortland player quarterbackJim Berkowitz to fresh­ Matthews in the end zone. scoring with a one-yard touchdown Hill. WhalenandCzameckidecided · entered the game with his warm-up man wide receiver David Hodgson. "We [the defense] came out a run. on an out pattern that Palumbo jacket on and was flagged for "ille­ "I swore a little bit after that play," little flat at the beginning of both With a little more than three tumed into a 12-yard first down gal equipment." Butterfield said. "I warned the kids halves," said Cerrone. "But I think minutes remaining on the clock, reception. After the play, Whalen "I guess you could say \YC capi­ about Cortland scoring a quick overall we played a strong game, Ithaca College President James J. personally thanked Palumbo for talized on their mistakes and penal­ touchdown. Fortunately, the kids with few mental mistakes." Whalen consulted with Larry making the catch. ties," Johnson said. "No matter how responded well and we regained the Once again the Bomber defense Czarnec~. offensive line coach, It was obvious the game was not bizarre they were." , .. momentum." November 11 1993 THEITHACAN 23 ...

PT Club Presents MASSAGE Student Herons end title bid CLINIC Top ranked William Smith beats IC in OT Massages will be given Rentals to get a shot off. and 1t ·~in the upper a little ncrvou~ hcforc the game:· Sunday Nov. 14th­ By Dickon Geddes corner -- just about un~avcablc." ..,he '-.aid "But a~ the game went on Thursday Nov. Furnished Apartments Ithacan Staff 18th The Bomber~ went Into the game they wen~ involved 111 hatt)e.., on the from 5-9 PM. Walking Distance to IC GENEY A -- It was a real heart­ without ..,tarting ~trikcr Melanie f1dd. pcrform111~ a.., \\ ell a, could $3 for 20 minutes break. Hu..,, hecau~e of an anterwr cruc1- he expc,·1cd ·· SIGN UP: North Foyer-Union The Ithaca College women·~ atc ligament (ACU ~pral!1. Senior The 111..1111 d1llcrcncc 1h1, 11mc November 12-17 from 10-2 272-1115 soccer team saw its chances of a ClJ-captain Kn,1111 Kaupang ,aid ~he he1wcen the 1wo team~ wa.., 1ha1 National Champion~hip go up in bcl1c\ed Hu..,, \\a~ ~orely mi~'-.cd \Vil ham Smith had quicker player, smoke on Sunday. Nov. 8. as the ··1 thmk it wa.., a hig <.hsadvan­ than Ithaca. Caru~o ~aid. Bombers lo~t to William Smith in tage to u,." ~he ~aid "She is a key Kaupang said 11 wa~ the Heron.., the regional final of the National target lorward. and ~omconc that 1ran,111on play that keyed their vic­ Collegiate Athletic As~ociation you knew wa~ alway~ there 10 p<1,.., ll'r1. '"II wa.., their coun1cr-a11ack­ (NCAA) Division III playoffs. the hall lo when we \\'Crl' on of­ rng 1ha1 1mpre~~cd me the mo~1:· fense." she s,11d. "'When we were a11acking:. WOMEN'S SOCCER Accordmg to Caruso. Huss ha, they ~ccm 10 intercept the hall and Only 2: 18 remained in the sec­ come on in leap~ and bound~ this then quickly go on the offen~e with ond period of overtime when year. "She has come on really well plenty of players on the attack.·· Bomber Dawn Straw's clearance thisycar,"shcsaid. "We also needed With the loss, the sca~on 1s O\ er. sliced off her foot and bounced just to hold the ball up front when we "The players have just had a fanla~­ . outside the Bombers' area. were on the offensive to allow play­ tic season. and they should remem­ 148 The Commons Ithaca, New York 14850 ber that," Caruso said. "However, I Tel: 607-275-9663 1-800-949-6715, ext. 25 The Herons' Staci Donald ers to come up and support the latched onto the bouncing ball with ~trikers -- Melanie was that ideal am sure that the seniors won't for­ her back to the goal, turned and person." get this loss very quickly." <..-. belled it into the top right-hand cor­ Both teams were undefeated Kaupang is one of the seniors ner of the goal. going into the game and they had who will not soon forget the loss. "I think that it came at an unfor­ played to a thrilling 2-2 overtime 'The loss has not really sunk in tunate time," Ithaca graduate assis­ tic in the regular season. yet," she said. "And with this being tant coach Janine Caruso said. "It Caruso said as the game went my last ever competitive soccer All the pancakes or french toast only took one little defensive break­ on, the Bombers got more and more game, I am not really sure when it will." you can eat, plus coffee, down to give her (Donald) a second into it. "I think that the players were for only $2.99. Men take second at NYSCTFAs Voted #1 Breakfast in Ithaca! By Chris Corbellini ish was in 1985, and Saturday's pressed with Hay's pcrfonnance, ~(j'ommon&, 272-6706' Ithacan Staff race : .:suited in the lowest point whose efforts were rewarded with a tune of 28:34 - good for 16th lthacaCollegemen'scrosscoun­ total ever for the harrier~ at a state place. "David Hay had a excellent try head coach Jim Nichols has meet. race, one of the better races of his emphasized all season that his Only Rochestc1 was able to keep career,'' Nichols said. "He would squad's goal is to continue to im­ the Bombers from snatching the \~.r~TER BREAK IN ISRAEL! be the athlete of the week forus," he prove in order to run their best dur­ state team championship trophy. said. Spend twoweeksasastudentvolunteer ing its final races. The Yellow Jackets finished with a ~r~g a:nd living on an army base. ~ low score of 34 points. Nichols also said the team 1s ·i MEN'S CROSS The senior foursome of Mike getting stronger each week during Mulligan, Steve Mathias, Hans this postseason. "We are making FROM COUNTRY 1,:, Haverkamp and David Hay all steady progress," he said. "We ran 5 :a Judging by their record-setting crossed the tape within the top better than we did last weekend. It's LOW PRICES 649: 1 perfonnance on Saturday, Nov. 6, twenty runners out of 92 . another step foward for us and we ... .8 need to improve to get to that next +REC.FEE at the New York State Collegiate Mulligan, who was the top INCLUDES ROUNDTFIIP AIRFARE, ROOM, step." KOSHER BOARD & TOURS :!!-­ Track and Field Association Cross Bomber finisher in 1992 at the 5! Country Championship meet, that championship meet with a I 0th This "next step" might occur _; this Saturday, Nov. I 3, atthc NCAA Departing from New York c.. goal may well be within reach. place showing overall, led the ~ The Bombers grabbed second Bombers once again, improving to Division Ill regional qualifier at December 20, 26 and 29 .gC: an impressive second place with a Rochester. Only the top five teams Some restrictions apply. place out of 13 teams with a com­ Call for other dates and atlcs E"' bined score of 6 7 points. The last time of27:37. will continue their postseasons and -2 .!i time Ithaca scored such a lofty fin- Nichols said he was very im- travel to the Division III Nationals. Contaci: Hope to see you soon. a, Nadonal Srudent ~ Coordlnawr: l4'1ttlsrad JllJ. GREl!NEBAUM Field hockey ousted in NCAAs 3!0 WEST 42ND S'IltEET SUITE 1818 ~UNTEERS Nl!W YORK. NY 10036~902 ·~alSRAEL 212643--IMB Cortland shuts out Bombers 1-0 in East regional FAX: 212 643-4855 By Glenn Roth half, and Ithaca never came back. between Amy Jones. who only had to make one save, and Dawn Ithacan Staff - Head coach Doris Kostrinsky said Cortland was the stronger team. Latham, who never made a save. For the fourth straight season "They were quicker, better ball han­ Senior Karen Hollands had a the Ithaca College field hockey team dlers and hit the ball harder." very active day, making I 8 saves. failed to make the National Colle­ Freshman forward Marie Kelly "It was a very busy day back there," J giate Athletic Association final four. said the Cortland players were more she said. "They had a very powerful skilled than the Bombers. "They offense. She played fantastic and FIELD HOCKEY had more foot speed than us and was dynamic in goal." To make the loss even harder to better ball handling skills," fresh­ Kostrinsky said Hollands handle, it was the third straight year men forward Marie Kelly said. .outplayed her Cortland counter­ they fell in the regional finals by The Bombers had trouble on of­ parts. one goal. fense, as Cortland outshot the "We had the stronger goalie but The Red Dragons of Cortland Bombers 24-2. "Offensively we we did not have a strong enough played the villian's role this year, could not penetrate their defense," offense and midfield to match up with a 1-0 win over the Bombers, Kostrinsky said. "We broke over with them." Kostrinsky said. spoiling the squad's season-long the 50 but we could not get over the Senior link Kim Dodge said she goal to make it to the final four 25." believed Cortland was just better. round. Caldwell agreed with her coach. "Cortland was stronger than us," Cortland has been the Bombers' "We had difficulty maintaining she said. "They could stop the ball ~ nemesis through the postseason, possession inside the 25, and were better than us." eliminating them in the New York unable to set up on offense," Last Saturday, the Bombers de­ State Collegiate Women's Athletic Caldwell said. Kelly said she feated Susquehanna 2-1. Association Championships as well. thought Cortland's defense was The Bombers jumped to a 2-0 "We had our heart set on making stronger. "They put immediate pres­ lead in the first half with goals from the final four," co-captain Cynthia sure on us and it was hard to initiate Bresnick and Dodge. In the second ~ ... Caldwell said. "It was very upset­ the offense," she said. half, Susquehanna got a late goal to 100% Wool Sweaters ting to fall short." One weakness of Cortland is cut the lead. House of The Bombers hopes of making it their goaltending, Kostrinsky said. "We were quicker and more from Ecuador $39.95 to the final four were ended when "We never amounted a consistent powerful," Kostrinsky said. "We Shalimar the game-winning goal was scored attack on their goalie," she said. were a step above them like Cortland Ethnic and Contemporary Downtown Ithaca Common, by Gina Carlo at 23:18 in the first Cortland's goaltending was split was above us." Clothing, Jewcliy and Accessories Open Everyday From Around the World 273-7939 place in 21 :02, sophomore Colleen Closer to the competition O'Leary in 53rd at 21:35. sopho­ more Courtney Novey in 64th at IC finishes nine points behind Colonials 21 :55 and senior Michelle Belanger Harvest -time: Adrean Scott said she was satisfied in 69th at 22:07. By Bridget O'Brien with the team's finish. nine points Scott said the difficult layout of Men and women take frrst at Ithacan Staff behind Binghamton. the course caused problems for her The Ithaca College women's Finishing first overall out of the squad. University of Rochester relays cross country team moved one step 184 runners was Tammy Wilcox of "We did fairly well as a team," closer to besting its main competi­ theCoastGuardAcademyin 19:19. she said. "But generally the women By Joshua MIine By Joshua MIine tion, SUNY Binghamton, at the Senior co-captain Gloria Hill fin­ weren't pleased with their times. It Ithacan Assistant Sports Editor Ithacan Assistant Sports Editor postseason championships. ished first for Ithaca ( seventh place was a difficult course with a lot of The Ithaca College men's The Ithaca College women •s overall) with a time of 19:42. twists and turns. The path was swimming and diving team did swimming and diving season is WOMEN'S Senior Moira Strong was next in treacherous -- narrow with a lot of not expect to win its season barely a week old and one swim­ 15th place at 20:14. rocks and roots. We didn't realize CROSS COUNTRY opener - they were wrong. mer has already qualified for a Sophomore Nava Tabak was just that the footing was going to be so At the Eastern Collegiate Ath­ chance to be selected to the behind Strong in 16th place, with a poor." letic Conference Championships at MEN'S postseason. time of20:19. As for team strategy. Scott said Connecticut College on Saturday, "Nava did really well," Scott the runners came out strong at the SWIMMING Nov. 6, the Bombers placed fourth .WOMEN'S said. "She stepped up her perfor­ start of the race. Head coach Kevin Markwardt overall with 130 points. mance a little bit and helped close "They took it out really hard. SWIMMING Among the 27 complete teams said the team was not counting some gaps between runners." We wanted to make contact early The Ithaca College women's that competed. Ithaca's top compe­ on a win at the University of Also in the top seven were se­ with the runners ahead due to the tition, SUNY Binghamton, finished Rochester Harvest relays. swimming and diving team niorco-captain Danielle Gall in 39th narrow paths," Scott said. third with 121 points. Head coach "We weren't necessarily ex­ started the season on a high note pecting it." Markwardt said. "It with a win at the Harvest Relays is the first meet of the year and at the University of Rochester. you are just Uying to get every­ Junior Julie Smith started the Soccer season ends in ECAC's one comfortable with compet­ season outright. winningthe 100- ing again." yard backstroke and qualifying with a total of 13 goals and four played well. "I felt I played well By Jennifer Saltzglver The Bombers dominated the for a "B" cut to the Nationals. assists, placing him sixth on the list against Binghamton," he said. ''We Ithacan Staff meet by winning five of the nine This means if there are spaces of career scoring leaders at Ithaca were short on troops. I'm really left at Nationals after all of the When a team loses over half races. College. Stephan• s 13 goals repre­ looking forward to next season. I've Markwardt said he knew his "A" cuts are clinched, the best their starting lineup, they usually sents the highest total by an Ithaca made a lot of improvements since squad had the talent to win, but "B" cut times are allowed to end up both mentally and physi­ player since 1980. last year and our team will be real he did not think they would put it swim. cally hindered. The absence of six starters from strong next year." all together so soon. Kim MacDonald the new MEN'S SOCCER the game hindered the team's per­ Stephan said the team will be "It really isn't a surprise," he women's swimming and diving fonnance. stronger this year and should erase said. "We have some real tal­ assistant coach said Miller and On Thursday, Nov. 4th, the "Having a lot ofinjuries hurt our any bitter memories from this year. ented kids on the team and we herself thought the meet would Bombers fell to Binghamton Uni­ game performance," said sopho­ "On a whole we had a good put them together. A couple of be close. versity 2-1 in overtime. more goalie Eric Pepper. "Senior season," he said. "Not making the kids were willing to swim sev­ "She [Miller] knew it was This loss, in the semifinals of the captains Joe Wunderlich and Tom National Collegiate Athletic Asso­ eral times over and over." going to be a tough meet," Eastern Collegiate Athletic Con­ Cosenza have led the defense all ciation tournament was a big disap­ Sophomore Colin Herlihy MacDonald said. "The team ference Playoffs, ended the Bomb­ season. Not having them play defi­ pointment but next season looks said he is excited about the team. didn't think it was going to be ers' extended season. nitely made it difficult to move the really good. We are losing three "I think we have a lot of talent," that close. I think they were sur­ Ithaca's only goal came in the ball in our normal style and gave seniors but Dove still has another he said. "Once we pull it all prised. It was eye opener. It was first quarter off the foot of sopho­ Binghamton a lot of scoring oppor­ year of eligibility. Our team goal together we will be a tough act to a good thing to realize what th_e more Todd Stephan, assisted by tunities." will be to make the NCAA tourna­ beat." season is going to be like." senior Jason Dove. Pepper recorded seven saves in ment-that is how good our poten­ Stephan wrapped up the season the game and said he thought he tial will be next year."

PAUL WINTER CONSORT PAUL WINTER, saxophone ou're EUGENE FRIESEN, violoncello GLEN VELEZ, percussion PERFORMING A CONCERT OF "EARTH MUSIC" SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 14 WALTER B. FORD HALL AUDITORIUM, 8:15 P.M. A PRE-CONCERT LECTURE IIY PROFESSOR JOHN WHITE WILL BEGIN AT 7:30 P.M. IN ROOM 201, FORD HALL Tickeh ova,lable November 2 at DeWitt Moll Ticket Center, Rebop Records, Tapes, and Comped Discs, Collegetown, and Dillingham box office, Ithaca College. $7.00 Oiilchn, lri,rcimns, • The Ithaca College Board of Student Publications onclllhacaealoge .... $12.00 lhx:a~c:Mri, ~' I will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 16, 1993, to d,and.ini6CAW,; ...... frinl cl llhaca Caloge; interview candidates who have applied to be editor IT~(A $1,t.OO Gtnnlp& in chief of The Ithacan for 1994. • The Board includes student, faculty, staff and Guaranteed administration representatives, but your Lowest Prices participation is encouraged. The public will be Traveling? On-caapus invited to ask questions of both candidates. • Following the candidate interviews, the Board IIHACA COLLEGE also will be available to hear questions and ..,..,_... _..._ concerns from any member of the College ...... rn, ..... _..... community. ._,c--...... -_,...$,U. DllylH• ...... R. -., ... ·-···-...... fl .,. Make yourself heard Ithaca• Travel Outlet .... -, IIOWIII CNlada fl• ..... 7:30 p.m. @2H-a67I @256•4l~I Tuesday, Nov. 16, 1993 272-6962 South Meeting Room, Campus Center 120 North Aurora St. Questions? Contact Paul Heaton, Downtown Manager of Student Publications, at 274-1036 1...... ,,, ,,., Tol.272""'4 November 11, 1993 THE ITHACAN 25 Gridders set to test undefeated Presidents r------By Marc ~ssler go.Right now, we are focusing on this game." Ithacan Staff The recent focus for IC has been the dras­ 1993 Ithaca College Football Record: 6-3 tic offensive improvement over the past With one more game to go in this season month.keyed by Joe Palumbo· s pcrfom1ance. Week 1O: Ithaca Bombers vs. washineton & Jefferson of ups and downs, the Ithaca College football He now ranks fourth on the all-time Date: Saturday. Nov. 13, 1993 Radio: 92-WICB -· Coverage begms at 1.40 p.m is at the threshold. The fate. of its entire Bomber receptions list with 82, and he's Time: 2p.m campaign comes down to the final regular looking for his sixth straight I 00-yard game. Place: College Field, Washington. Pa seasongameagainstWashington&Jefferson. Through the air the Bombers have been re- THE OPPONENT In what may be his final afternoon on the markable, gaining 1,629 yards,just 29 yards THE SERIES Head Coach: John Luckhardt (11 years, 86-24-2) sidelines, head coach Jim Butterfield needs shortoftheall-timeschoolrecordsetin 1986. In 1992: Ithaca 47, Washington & Jefferson 28 Current Record: 8-0 his 6-3 Bombers to do what no other team has "I would credit our recent success to expe- Ithaca, ranked second in the East Region. Starters Returning: 12 (6 o!lense/6 defense) done against the Presidents in 1993 -- win. rienceontheoffense,"Butterfieldsaid. "There rallied from 13 points down to score 33 unan­ Key Players: Shawn McGee, Sr., DE. Shawn A victory would most likely give them a is more confidence between the receivers and swered pomts. Senior fullback Jeff Wittman Prendergast, Sr.; LB, MikeSpeca,Jr., WR post-season berth into the ECAC playoffs, the passer. In the case of a kid like Palumbo, ran 33 times for 272 yards, a school record. The Starters Lost: 10 (5 ollense/5 defense) while a loss would spell the end of the season. you need to have that kind of a connection on win was number 200 for coach Jim Buttertield Colors: Red and Black "Our preparation will be completely the your offense." Ithaca leads series 2-1 Affiliation: NCAA Division Ill same as it has been all season long, before The production level of the Ithaca offense every game," Butterfield said. "I feel the may be where everyone expected it to be, team handled our last game very well, and I however, this weekend will be a true test of feel we will be prepared once again." their talent as they face a W &J defense nated opponents all season. The key has been Williams has amassed 748 yards on 129 Even with the retirement of Butterfield, ranked first in both.Division llI rushing and a sturdy offensive front five, and a strong rushes, while scoring eight touchdowns. Al­ along with last weekend's emotional victory scoring (6 points per game), and second in ground game led by freshman Jake Williams. though he leads the team m rushing yardage, over Cortland, the Bombers are on a roll. total defense. W &J is led by linebackers "The strength of the team coming into the he has not been the only threat, with fellow W&J, however, has been rolling for eight Dennis Hanley and Shawn Prendergast, who season wa!> our veteran offensive line, and first year starter Keith Miller (61 rushes for weeks. have thrived in their 4-3 alignment. while we wcren 't certain about the back tic Id 355 yard!>, 8 touchdowns) also seeing con~id- "Wecan'tdoanything about what's going As solid as their defense has been, the situation, we have some freshmen who arc crablcplaying time. Quarterback Jason Baer, on in Ithaca," said the Presidents' head coach. offense has been equally as good. Averaging pcrfom1ing very well," coach Luckhardt said. abo a freshman. has had a good ~cason. John Lockhardt. "I have tremendous respect 246 yards rushing, 136 yards passing and 36 ·They have become a strength for u~. and our throwing for IO 18 yards on 70 complet1ons. for Coach Butterfield, and it's sad to see him points per game. the Presidents have dom - running game has seen lots of development." with 14 touchdown~ and 5 interception, Runners------­1 continued from page 21 times." lcgc eras~ country history. foll

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Sponsored by the Ithaca College Rape Education Committee ... 26 THE ITHACAN November 11 1993 Despite injuries, wrestlers remain optimistic Murtha, Isselbacher out for season; Maslin to miss Invitational By Dave Udoff "I've come to learn Ithacan Staff that you can do great Injuries can ruin a season. On Friday and Saturday, Nov. things early in the year, 12-13, the Ithaca College wrestling but the key is what you team begins its season, in hopes of have at the end. " proving that a season-ending in­ -John Murray, jury to 177-pound All-American wrestling head coach Mike Murtha and several other minor injuries will not ruin theirs. although Murray said that is also a Head Coach John Murray's question mark. squad hosts the 11th annual Ithaca "Certainly both guys are good Invitational. Thirteen schools will guys and have been good wrestlers participate in the double elimina­ forus,"Murray said. "Murtha.how­ tion tournament. ever, is a two-time All-American Last year's individual champi­ and was third at the Nationals last ons at the Invitational included co­ year. So that's a big hit. I think that captains Kent Maslin and Karl it will be pretty tough to replace Zenie, as well as junior Chris him. Murtha is a big loss -- there is Matteotti. Those three will be key no way to get around that.·• returnees this season, although Another key loss is heavyweight - Steve Farr, who will not wrestle or Maslin will miss this weekend's The Ithacan/ Dave Slurzberg tournament due to a shoulder in­ practice with the team until next semester because he has only one jury. Karl Zenie (in black) and Brian Walsh jockey for position during practice on Wednesday. The The team, however, has been term of eligibility remaining. Bombers open their season Nov.12 and 13 hosting the 11th annual Ithaca Invitational. plagued by more serious injuries There are some newcomers to this season. the team. This year's incoming Senior Dave lsselbacher dislo­ freshman crop includes James competition, Murray said. weight for the whole year," Murray Despite the team's injuries, cated his elbow in a dual meet last Dwyer, an Empire State Games sil­ Many of the wrestlers in this said. Matteotti said he believes this year's season and probably will not be ver medalist; Joshua Potter, a two­ weekend's tournament, including Although Murray recognizes the squad has a good mix of experi­ able to wrestle this year, according time New York Section IX Cham­ junior Matt Sorochinsky, will be importance of the Invitational, he enced wrestlers and newcomers. to Murray. pion; and Chris Wolfe, a New York wrestling at a higher weight class said what really counts is what the 'The younger guys will benefit from Mike Murtha, a two-time All­ Section VI Champion. than they are accustomed to for the team accomplishes towards the end working with the older guys," he American who finished third in the One newcomer is a bit different invite. They then will drop down to of the season. said. National Collegiate Athletic Asso­ than the average Ithaca wrestler. A their normal wrestling weight for "I don't really emphasize [the Maslin also said he thinks that ciation championships last season, transfer from Niagra Community the major competitions later in the early season tournaments] as much there is good leadership on the team underwent surgery after injuring College, Ron Long is a two-time season. anymore," he said. "I've come to and is hopeful for a national cham­ his knee during football practice NJCAA Region m champion, and "When you get some more ex­ learn that you can do great things pionship this season. '"That stands earlier this fall. He will try to come at the age of 34, will probably be the perience, it's sometimes nicer for early in the year, but the key is what above and beyond everything else," back to wrestling later this season, oldest wrestler to compete in NCAA some guys not to have to cut [their] you have at the end." he said. ARTHUR M. CODDINGTON, M.D. Ithacan deadlines announces the opening of a Advertising SECOND OFFICE of the Display advertising must be reserved by 5 p.m. on the Friday preceding publication. This is also the deadline for cancellations. TIER ACNE CLINIC Classified and personal advertisements must be received by 5 p,,m. on the at Tompkins County Professional Building --- Monday preceding publication. 1301 Trumansburg Rd. (Route 96) Letters to the Editor ITHACA Letters to the Editor must be received by 5 p.m. Monday preceding publication. (607) 272-2026 (not in phone book) For more information contact The tthacan at 274-3207 Johnson City office: 394 Main St.

After graduation, you can begin a paralegal career in just four months of daytime study at Fairleigh Dickinson University, New Jersey's largest private university. • Program approved by the American Bar Association MEET WITH AN FDU WE GO WHERE YOU GO: • Nine-month evening program also available REPRESENTATIVE W4dnesday, Nov. 17 LONDON $145 • Choose either General Practice or Litigation 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. LOS ANGELES $159 Management Gall the College Placement • Two convenient FDU New Jersey campus Office tor an appointment. PARIS $199 locatiOns - Teaneck-Hackensack and ROME $169 Florham-Madison For more Information, • Employment assistance complete and relum the DAILY NY & NJ CAIRO $355 coupon belOW or call TOKYO $405 • Stafford Student Loans available 7:15 am 2:50 pm FIRS ft fl0m New Vat, 001 wtl(, ~ on c, • On-campus housing 201-593-8990 IOlfld q:, ptl'Chllse. T.s & ~ not n­ 9:40 am 6:40 pm dJded.Aeslridicns~-Some'-sl!W/ltQ.ft ------Cl.I',,., MAI. JD: an lrmMionlllSlJdeltlDand'or.n:119treslridEd. ,,..,,,,...... ,,._nldllghDlctirlontmlwrllly,2115...... ,AN., llldildn,NJ01NJ 12:40 pm Name------­ Address ------710 WEST STATE STREET , &01-m• ~~lana------State -- Zip --- vunuvv ______Yr. ofGniduatlon ___ Bilrm Phone (Day) ______(Evening}______ua1w1 m:toRTL!NE .... November 11 1993 THE ITHACAN 27 Itbacan Sports BY THE NUMBE.RS FOOTBALL BOMBER SCOREBOARD

ITHACA 32, CORTLAND 14 4. Women'• Soccer (17-1-3) FJekf Hockey (13-9) Nov 6 at Ithaca PASSING-Cortland, BerkowilzS-25-2-122,Sanzo Nowrnber6 November& llhllca College 12 13 7 o- 32 3-5-0-17. Ithaca, Smith 10-21-3-187, Betz 1-2-0, 12, Ithaca 1, Geneseo 0, (OT) Ithaca 2, Susquehanna 1 Cortland 7 0 7 0 - 14 Murphy1-1-0, 15. RECIEVING-Cortland, Matthews3-31, Davies 2- Novanber7 November7 CC-Hodgson65ydpassfromBerkowitz (Peny 17, Mc:Pherson2-2, Hodgson 1-60, Elis 1-13,Myers 1- William Smith 1, Ithaca o Corti~ 1, lthacaO kid<) 6, Sanford 1-5. Ithaca, Palumbo 8-118, Munoz 2-70, IC-Johnson Syd run (kick failed) Jones 1-15,Sandagato 1-11. IC-Johnson 1 yd run (2ptconwrsionfalled) women·, Cross-Country Football (6-3) IC- Munoz 53 yd pass from Smilh(DeMayfailed) Nov9mber6 November& IC-Pakmlo 7ydpassfromSmilh(2ptCXll1Y8rsion llhlcaflnished4thattheECACChampionshlp tthaca32, Cortland 14 faled} CC-Matthews 4ydpass from Berkowitz(Perry UPSTATE N.Y. DIVISION Ill COACHES POLL faled) Men'• Crosa-Country Volleyball (37·13) IC-Martin 1 yd run (DeMay kick) AsofNov.8 Novanber6 Novembers lthacafflished2ndattheNYSCT&FAChmapionships Ithaca 2, New Paltz 0 cc IC Name W L Ithaca 2, Hunter 0 13 22 1.Union 9 0 Ithaca 2, Oswego 1 58-206 52-278 2. BuflaloState 7 1 Men's SWfmmlng and Diving 214 353 3.Hobart 7 2 Novanber& November& 11-30-2 20-29-0 4. Rensselear 6 2 Ithaca 1stat Rochester Relays Ithaca 2, New York University 1 9-33 6-33 5.Albany 6 3 Ithaca 2, Brockport 1 1-0 2.1 6. Brockport 6 3 RIT 2, Ithaca 0 6-58 9-100 7.ITHACA 6 3 Women'• Swimming and Diving a.Rochester 5 4 November& November10 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS 9.Hartwick 3 3 Ithaca 1stat Rochester Relays Rochester def. Ithaca 15-8, 15-10, 15-5 RUSHING-Corlland, McPherson 18-116, HedkJnd 10.St.JohnFisher 4 4 2-10, Conklin 1-1. lthaca,Johnson23-94,Smith6-39, Konick 9-31, Martin 8-22, Cooney5-21, Mceonnick2- THE WEEK AHEAD Oct.20 Ithaca at Washington & Jefferson THE WEEK AHEAD Frlday,Nov.12 Men'sCross-CountryatNCAAatRochester WOMEN'S SOCCER Wrestling hosts Ithaca Invitational 11 a.m. 2p.m. WILLIAM SMITH 1, ITHACA 0 Second Overtime-1, William Smith, Donald, 117:41. Nov. 7 atWilliamSmith Shots on goal-Ithaca, 6-0. WilliamSmith, 9-1. Ithaca College O O O O- 0 Men's Swimming and Diving at Hobart WIiiiam Smith o O O 1- 1 Saturday, Nov. 13 11 a.m. Football at Washington &Jefferson 2p.m. Women's Swimming and Diving at William Smith MEN'S SOCCER 11 a.m. Firstperiod-1, Ithaca, Stephan 13(Dove).31 :55. Wrestling hosts Ithaca Invitational BINGHAMTON 2, ITHACA 1 Second period-1, Binghamton, Cohen (Pabon), 2p.m. Nov. 4 at Ithaca 74:47. Tuesday, Nov. 16 Ithaca College O 1 0 1 - 2 FirstOvertime-.1, Binghamton, Schneider, Men's Swimming and Diving at Owsego Wllllam Smith 1 o o o- 1 97:10. Women's Cross-Countiyat NCAA at Rochester 6p.m. Shotsongoal-lthaca, 16-1.Binghamton, 12-2. 11 a.m.

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··:... 28 THE ITHACAN November 11, 1993 THE BACK PAGE

Campus n g Can you identify I these campus e buildings? -- s Answers on Back Page, Nov. 18 Ithacan

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Photos by·J~ff K._.BrQD.ello

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