09.01.2011

32
find more. online. www.theithacan.org The Ithacan Thursday September 1, 2011 Ithaca, N.Y. Volume 79, Issue 1 SPIRIT DRIVEN Senior corner and defensive captain plays with heavy heart as he recalls late father, page 27 ALL THAT Nostalgic college students try to bring back ’90s, page 19 SPORTS PREVIEW Get an inside look at the nine varsity fall sports as they prepare to break into action. SPECIAL EDITION IC vision plan set in motion BY BRIAN RANK STAFF WRITER e Ithaca College community will soon begin to see the college’s 10-year vision plan take shape as tangible changes to the institution go into effect this academic year. is summer, the college’s board of trustees ap- proved IC 20/20, a 10-year strategic plan to enhance the student college experience and be a step ahead of other colleges and universities. e plan, assembled from the recommendations of eight committees, suggests three main themes: creating an integrative core curriculum to broaden the diversity of courses and off-campus opportunities in each course of study; redefining professor’s duties to allow more flex- ibility to include students in projects outside the course curriculum; and requiring more community engage- ment and volunteerism by students. Students will see the first effects of the plan when a pilot program for communications and business stu- dents launches a New York City Center and accepts its first class. e program was originally scheduled for this fall but moved to the spring because of lack of time and resources, Marisa Kelly, provost and vice president of academic affairs, said. Kelly said a China Center and a strengthened pro- gram in Washington, D.C., in collaboration with Cornell University would join the list of offerings in the future. Kelly said the second change the college will focus on during the next few years will be the integrative core curriculum. e new curriculum is aimed at increasing collabo- ration between schools and adding requirements for students to take more courses outside their particular Convocation sets intellectual goals BY ERICA PALUMBO ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR As students stepped into the Ben Light Gymnasium Monday, they also stepped into a new chapter of their lives. President Tom Rochon, along with sev- eral faculty members and students, advised the incoming class to view college as the first step in their lifelong journeys. “By the time you complete your journey of learning, you should be wealthy with ex- perience and insight,” he said. “I do want to say that I hope your time here will only be part of your journey. It is continuous — and your time at Ithaca College will be a part that is particularly rich.” Despite rough weather from Hurricane Irene, Monday’s sunny skies set a posi- tive tone for the class of 2015 at the 2011 Convocation ceremony. e freshmen buzzed with anticipation as they filtered into this year’s introductory College launches new rebranding campaign to bolster competition From left, Marisa Kelly, provost and vice president of academic affairs, and President Tom Rochon proceed to Convocation on Monday. MICHELLE BOULé/THE ITHACAN BY NICOLE OGRYSKO STAFF WRITER Ithaca College officially launched a rebrand- ing and advertising campaign today to better market the college locally and nationwide. e campaign started with the launch of the college’s updated website and logo yes- terday, but Rachel Reuben, associate vice president at the Office of Marketing Com- munications, said the initial changes are just the beginning of a set of marketing standards the college will implement across campus as part of a strategic advertising effort. Reuben said the col- lege initiated the rebrand- ing campaign last August to find clear, consistent messages and visuals to use throughout the college. e col- lege also wanted the initiative to coincide with the IC 20/20 vision plan and address the issue of increasing competition among universities. ough the site’s navigation and content did not change, Reuben describes the updates as a “fresh coat of paint.” e website features two stories of stu- dents whose college experiences made them “Ready” for the future. e “micro-site,” itha- ca.edu/ready, includes 12 additional “Ready” student stories, photos and videos, which will cycle throughout the year. Reuben said the brand identity and logo have come a long way since last spring. She describes the “Ready” brand identity as a fill- in-the-blank where students can fill in a short description of how the college has prepared them for life after school. The college’s logo has also undergone many major changes from the institution’s previous signage, which displayed “Ithaca” in uppercase letters. In March, students had the option of choosing one of two designs. After gathering feedback, Reuben said, the college decided to alter the options. e new logo dis- plays the full “Ithaca College” name in navy blue uppercase letters, with an inter- locked “I” and “C” in the middle of a shield to the left of the college name. Bonny Griffith, director for recruitment marketing at the Office of Marketing Com- munications, said the new logo clears up confusion that audience members have be- tween the Ithaca area and the college. “It brings the word ‘college’ back into our logo,” she said. “That’s been a challenge for us in recent years because Ithaca is a city and it’s an entity that people know not just as a college.” ough the college has done some ad- vertising in the past, Reuben said beginning tomorrow, the marketing office will roll out a comprehensive strategic advertising cam- paign by placing advertisements in Google searches, e New York Times and Facebook, in addition to publications in the Finger Lakes region. She said the college will focus on New York City and the Northeast region later this fall and spring. When the rebranding initiative began last August, the college partnered with marketing firm SimpsonScarborough to perform market research with prospective students. “In small pockets we were known for a fantastic music school and a state-of-the-art communications school, but it wasn’t largely known,” Reuben said. “Many people have heard of the ‘Ithaca College’ name, but we re- See BRAND, page 4 See CONVOCATION, page 4 See VISION, page 4 Rachel Reuben, associate vice president of the Office of Marketing Communications, sifts through pages with the new Ithaca College logo. The rebranding initiative was launched today. RACHEL ORLOW/THE ITHACAN The logo launched today as part of the rebranding initiative. COURTESY OF ITHACA COLLEGE

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Page 1: 09.01.2011

find more. online. www.theithacan.org

The IthacanThursdaySeptember 1, 2011

Ithaca, N.Y.Volume 79, Issue 1

spirit drivenSenior corner and defensive captain plays with heavy heart as he recalls late father, page 27

All thAtNostalgic college students try to bring back ’90s, page 19

SPORTS PREVIEWGet an inside look at the nine varsity fall sports as they prepare to break into action.

SPECIAL EDITION

IC vision plan set in motion

By Brian rank staff writer

The Ithaca College community will soon begin to see the college’s 10-year vision plan take shape as tangible changes to the institution go into effect this academic year.

This summer, the college’s board of trustees ap-proved IC 20/20, a 10-year strategic plan to enhance the student college experience and be a step ahead of other colleges and universities.

The plan, assembled from the recommendations of eight committees, suggests three main themes: creating an integrative core curriculum to broaden the diversity of courses and off-campus opportunities in each course of study; redefining professor’s duties to allow more flex-ibility to include students in projects outside the course curriculum; and requiring more community engage-ment and volunteerism by students.

Students will see the first effects of the plan when a pilot program for communications and business stu-dents launches a New York City Center and accepts its first class. The program was originally scheduled for this fall but moved to the spring because of lack of time and resources, Marisa Kelly, provost and vice president of academic affairs, said.

Kelly said a China Center and a strengthened pro-gram in Washington, D.C., in collaboration with Cornell University would join the list of offerings in the future.

Kelly said the second change the college will focus on during the next few years will be the integrative core curriculum.

The new curriculum is aimed at increasing collabo-ration between schools and adding requirements for students to take more courses outside their particular

Convocation sets intellectual goals

By erica palumBo assistant news editor

As students stepped into the Ben Light Gymnasium Monday, they also stepped into a new chapter of their lives.

President Tom Rochon, along with sev-eral faculty members and students, advised the incoming class to view college as the

first step in their lifelong journeys.“By the time you complete your journey

of learning, you should be wealthy with ex-perience and insight,” he said. “I do want to say that I hope your time here will only be part of your journey. It is continuous — and your time at Ithaca College will be a part that is particularly rich.”

Despite rough weather from Hurricane Irene, Monday’s sunny skies set a posi-tive tone for the class of 2015 at the 2011 Convocation ceremony.

The freshmen buzzed with anticipation as they filtered into this year’s introductory

College launches new rebranding campaign to bolster competition

From left, Marisa Kelly, provost and vice president of academic affairs, and President Tom Rochon proceed to Convocation on Monday.MiChelle Boulé/The iThaCan

By nicole ogrysko staff writer

Ithaca College officially launched a rebrand-ing and advertising campaign today to better market the college locally and nationwide.

The campaign started with the launch of the college’s updated website and logo yes-terday, but Rachel Reuben, associate vice president at the Office of Marketing Com-munications, said the initial changes are just the beginning of a set of marketing standards the college will implement across campus as part of a strategic advertising effort.

R e u b e n said the col-lege initiated the rebrand-ing campaign last August to find clear, c o n s i s t e n t messages and visuals to use throughout the college. The col-lege also wanted the initiative to coincide with the IC 20/20 vision plan and address the issue of increasing competition among universities.

Though the site’s navigation and content did not change, Reuben describes the updates as a “fresh coat of paint.”

The website features two stories of stu-dents whose college experiences made them “Ready” for the future. The “micro-site,” itha-ca.edu/ready, includes 12 additional “Ready” student stories, photos and videos, which will cycle throughout the year.

Reuben said the brand identity and logo have come a long way since last spring. She describes the “Ready” brand identity as a fill-in-the-blank where students can fill in a short description of how the college has prepared them for life after school.

The college’s logo has also undergone many major changes from the institution’s previous signage, which displayed “Ithaca” in uppercase letters. In March, students had the option of choosing one of two designs.

After gathering feedback, Reuben said, the college decided to alter the options. The new

logo dis-plays the full “Ithaca C o l l e g e ” name in navy blue uppercase letters, with an inter-

locked “I” and “C” in the middle of a shield to the left of the college name.

Bonny Griffith, director for recruitment marketing at the Office of Marketing Com-munications, said the new logo clears up confusion that audience members have be-tween the Ithaca area and the college.

“It brings the word ‘college’ back into our logo,” she said. “That’s been a challenge for us in recent years because Ithaca is a city and it’s an entity that people know not just as a college.”

Though the college has done some ad-

vertising in the past, Reuben said beginning tomorrow, the marketing office will roll out a comprehensive strategic advertising cam-paign by placing advertisements in Google searches, The New York Times and Facebook, in addition to publications in the Finger Lakes region. She said the college will focus on New York City and the Northeast region later this fall and spring.

When the rebranding initiative began last

August, the college partnered with marketing firm SimpsonScarborough to perform market research with prospective students.

“In small pockets we were known for a fantastic music school and a state-of-the-art communications school, but it wasn’t largely known,” Reuben said. “Many people have heard of the ‘Ithaca College’ name, but we re-

See brand, page 4

See convocation, page 4 See vision, page 4

Rachel Reuben, associate vice president of the office of Marketing Communications, sifts through pages with the new ithaca College logo. The rebranding initiative was launched today.

RaChel oRlow/The iThaCan

The logo launched today as part of the rebranding initiative.CouRTesy oF iThaCa College

Page 2: 09.01.2011

[Thursday Briefing]2 The Ithacan Thursday, September 1, 2011

Gadhafi son negotiates surrenderAbdal Hakim Belhaj, the rebel command-

er in Tripoli, said Moammar Gadhafi’s son, al-Saadi, called him in order to negotiate the terms of his own surrender yesterday.

Belhaj said al-Saadi first called Tuesday and asked whether his safety could be guaran-teed. Belhaj said he told al-Saadi he would not be harmed, but he would be treated according to the law.

Belhaj told Al-Jazeera television that al-Saadi had offered to return to the capital in exchange for guarantees of his safety.

Al-Saadi’s surrender would be a major blow to Gadhafi’s crumbling regime. The reb-els have been pressing toward Gadhafi’s last major stronghold, his hometown of Sirte, and loyalists now control only a handful of areas, including Bani Walid to the west.

Rebels have insisted that Gadhafi and his family will be tried in Libya, but human rights activists and lawyers urged the rebels yester-day to turn the former dictator over to the In-ternational Criminal Court.

Gadhafi’s wife and three of his children fled to Algeria earlier this week, while the longtime dictator and several of his sons are still at large.

Security heightened for Sept. 11 The federal government is escalating secu-

rity around the country in preparation for the 10th anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks and conducting confidential briefings with state and local law enforcement organizations. But of-ficials say there is no specific indication that a terror plot against the U.S. is under way.

Americans can expect more security at airports, mass transit stations, U.S. borders, government buildings and major athletic events over the next month.

The significance of the 10-year anniversary of the worst terror attacks on U.S. soil is not lost on security officials, who fear someone with terrorist sympathies might see 9/11 as an opportunity to make a statement.

UN bombing suspects detainedA few days before a car bombing at United

Nations’ headquarters in Nigeria that killed 23 people, the country’s secret police arrested two men who were suspected of organizing the

attack, authorities said yesterday which raises questions about why it wasn’t averted.

The State Security Service’s statement to journalists said it also sought a third suspect they said had “al-Qaida links” and recently re-turned from Somalia. It offered new evidence that the radical Muslim sect known locally as Boko Haram, which claimed Friday’s attack on the U.N. as their own, has ties to al-Qaida-affiliated terror elsewhere in Africa.

The agency did not offer details if it shared any of the intelligence with diplomats in Abuja, Nigeria’s capital. The security chief for the U.N. previously said it received no spe-cific warning about a coming attack.

The secret police said the two men are be-ing held at a military base.

Iraq deaths reach nearly 4,500As of Tuesday, at least 4,474 members

of the U.S. military had died in the Iraq war since it began in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count.

The figure includes nine military civilians killed in action.

At least 3,524 military personnel died as a result of hostile action, according to the military’s numbers.

Since the start of U.S. military operations in Iraq, 32,175 U.S. service members have been wounded in hostile action, according to the Department of Defense.

NYPD infiltrates Muslim areasWorking with the CIA, the New York Police

Department maintained a list of “ancestries of interest” and dispatched undercover officers to monitor Muslim businesses and social groups, according to new documents that offer a rare glimpse inside an intelligence program the NYPD insists doesn’t exist.

The documents add new details to an inves-tigation that explained how undercover NYPD officers singled out Muslim communities for surveillance and infiltration.

The Demographics Unit, a squad of 16 of-ficers fluent in a total of at least five languages, was told to map ethnic communities in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut and identify where people socialize, shop and pray.

Once that analysis was complete, the NYPD

would deploy officers in the communities dressed as the civilians.

Police used census data and government da-tabases to map areas it considered “hot spots” as well as the ethnic neighborhoods of New York’s tri-state area.

Judge to block cell phone mergeAn administration official says the Justice

Department is moving to block AT&T’s $39 bil-lion deal to buy T-Mobile USA.

The government contends that the ac-quisition of the No. 4 wireless carrier in the country by No. 2 AT&T would reduce com-petition and lead to price increases. The deal has faced opposition from consumer groups and No. 3 carrier Sprint.

T-Mobile is struggling to compete with the larger carriers and owner Deutsche Telekom AG has said it’s not willing to invest more in the venture. The proposed transaction would put AT&T past Verizon Wireless as the nation’s

largest wireless provider. Four wireless provid-ers — Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile and Sprint — account for more than 90 percent of mobile wireless connections.

Hope from Feds stimulates stocksThe discussion of more economic stimulus

from the Federal Reserve was enough to send stocks higher. The Dow Jones industrial average rose 20 points Tuesday, its third day of gains.

Minutes from the Fed’s latest policy meeting on Aug. 9 showed that central bank officials discussed options to bolster the economy, including buying more Treasury bonds. In the end, they decided to keep in-terest rates low until at least mid-2013.

Stocks were mixed for much of the day Tuesday after an index of consumer confi-dence plunged in August to the lowest level since April 2009.

SOURCE: Associated Press

Nation&World

Picking up the pieces Henry Rhines tries to salvage anything he can from the debris field that was once his home in Columbia, N.C. on Tuesday. A number of houses along U.S. Route 64 south of Columbia were destroyed when a tornado touched down Friday night before Hurricane Irene’s wind and rain.

SHAwN RoCCo/ASSoCIATed pReSS

VideoCheck out this week’s 1-on-1 with senior Mike Conti of the men’s football team.

Audio SlideshowTake a look at this week’s audio slide-show featuring the freshmen welcome event E Komo Mai.

VideoListen to sophomore Dylan Lyons speak about his experience in London during the riots this summer.

Multimedia

corrections

It is The Ithacan’s policy to correct all errors of fact. Please contact Elma Gonzalez at 274-3207.

this weekThursday1 Friday2 Saturday3

Shabbat Services will begin at 6 p.m. in Muller Chapel.

Shabbat Dinner will begin at 7 p.m. in Terrace Dining Hall.

Spit That! Open Mic Night will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. in IC Square.

WICB/VIC Rush Night will be held from 7 to 8 p.m. in the Park Auditorium.

The Ithacan Rush Night will begin at 8 p.m. in the Park Auditorium.

Hillel Labor Day Gorge Hike will meet at 1 p.m. at the Textor flagpole.

5 MondayImprint Magazine Rush Night will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. in Park 220.

Tuesday6Student Organization Fair will be held from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in Emerson Suites.

Evensong, a Protestant Community worship service, will begin at 9:30 p.m. in Muller Chapel.

I.C. Dance, sponsored by IC Ballroom, will be held from 8 to 10 p.m. in Emerson Suites.

Wednesday7

add your event

Email your events for “This Week” to Assistant News Editor Erica Palumbo at [email protected] by 5 p.m. Monday to have them printed in this sec-tion of The Ithacan.

Catholic Mass will be held at 1 and 9 p.m. in Muller Chapel.

Sizzling Summer Splash, sponsored by Up ‘Till Dawn, will be held from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. on the Campus Center Quad.

Hillel Welcome Back Barbecue will be held from 4 to 7 p.m. in front of Muller Chapel.

4 Sunday

September 1–7, 2011

Can’t get enough of our stories? There’s even more online. Check out our multimedia at theithacan.org.

Got a news tip?

Contact News Editor Kelsey O’Connor at

[email protected] or 274-3207.

Page 3: 09.01.2011

Thursday, September 1, 2011 newS The Ithacan 3

by Kelsey O’COnnOr news editor

John Keshishoglou, founding dean of the Ithaca College School of Communications passed away last Wednesday from pancreatic cancer. He was 79. His impact and memory lin-ger not only at the college, but also worldwide.

Keshishoglou was born in northern Greece, worked as a photojournalist for the Greek and foreign press, and served in the Greek Army for two years. After an honorable discharge, he went to the United States to further his educa-tion. There he received a B.A. from Morningside College, an M.A. from the University of Iowa and a Ph.D. in mass media and instructional design from Syracuse University.

Know as “Dr. Kesh,” he joined the college com-munity in 1965 as chair of the Department of Television-Radio and director of the Instructional Resources Center. In 1971, after the creation of the communications school, he became dean and held the position until 1979.

Diane Gayeski, current dean of the communi-cations school, was a student while Keshishoglou was dean and said he brought incredible vision and energy to the college community.

“There wouldn’t be a school of communica-tions without him,” she said. “He was willing to battle administration and personally put his own reputation on the line to promote what he really knew could be the school of communications.”

In 1967, Keshishoglou brought Rod Serling to the college as a visiting professor. The “Twi-light Zone” creator taught until his death in 1975. Keshishoglou was a founding member of the committee that organizes the biennial Rod Serling Conference.

Melissa Gattine, manager of the Office of Marketing Communications and Park Design House, worked with Keshishoglou on the Rod Serling Conference committee since the con-ference’s inception in 2006 and said he will be missed at the upcoming conference next week.

“Kesh was known to have this really spunky style,” she said. “People really admired him for his personality and also his professional contri-butions. He was kind of our institution. He was really symbolic of the communications school.”

Gayeski said Keshishoglou was always con-cerned with his students and incredibly hands-on. She remembered an instance when she was work-ing on an ICTV production and someone was short a camera operator on their crew.

“They were in a little bit of a panic, and they were sort of running around and Dr. Kesh said,

‘What’s going on?’ and they said, ‘My cameraman didn’t show up,’” she said. “And he said, ‘No prob-lem I’ll fill in,’ and just went in and ran camera for the show.”

Patricia Zimmermann, professor of cinema, photography and media arts, knew Keshishoglou as a colleague and friend for more than 30 years. She worked with him both at the college and at Nan-yang Technological University in Singapore.

“This is really someone who brought the world to the communications school and brought the communications school to the world,” she said.

Zimmermann said Dr. Kesh’s impact on stu-dents was enormous wherever he taught. After his students in Singapore heard of his death, they went to Facebook and began creating a memorial for him.

“Sometimes students and those of us at Ithaca College can forget that there are people on our faculty who push us irrevocably into the world beyond Ithaca,” she said. “That is truly what Kesh taught me about the life of an intellectual. It’s not about being in just one little place, in one little, tiny community. It’s about this larger social, intel-lectual and ethical contract with the world.”

Even after retiring in 2000, Keshishoglou re-mained active in the Park School by working with Park Scholars and teaching courses until last year.

Last spring, the communications school

established the John Keshishoglou Center for Global Communications Innovation to honor his passion for international media. The center houses an annual mini-course and international media competition, Media for Social Respon-sibility, which helps defray student and faculty travel costs for international research. Even-tually the center will house a global executive master’s degree in communications innovation.

“It very much honors Kesh’s spirit of global-ization and innovation,” Gayeski said.

The John Keshishoglou Center embodies his spirit of global communication. Zimmermann said he would encourage every student to travel.

“Many times he told me the most important part of our communications student education is to live overseas and travel overseas.”

Keshishoglou was a driving force for what the communications school has become, and Gayeski said he never gave up his commitment to the college.

“We certainly want to honor his legacy,” Gayeski said. “He was the first dean. I was his stu-dent, and here I am the current dean. I feel very humbled to follow in his footsteps.”

A funeral service is planned for 11 a.m. Saturday at St. Catherine’s Greek Orthodox Church at 120 West Seneca St.

by gerald dOherty staff writer

Across the campus, from the Circle Apartments to the new Athletic and Events Cen-ter, construction projects that broke ground last semester are starting to wrap up.

New con-struction on the Circle Apart-ments will add 168 beds to the existing com-plex by the end of next July. In addition to resi-dencies, the Office of Facilities will expand the workout room in the community center, relocate the mailbox room and renovate the vending machine room into a con-venience store, which will be com-pleted within three weeks.

On the other side of campus, construction on a new pathway connecting Coddington Road to campus will be completed within the next three weeks.

Rick Couture, associate vice president for the Office of Facilities, said the construction began in May and is intended to provide an alter-native to dormitories.

“One of the messages we hear clearly from students is that they would prefer apartment-style liv-ing over typical residence hall-style living,” Couture said.

Couture also said the pathway is part of the construction of the Athletic and Events Center proj-ect and will make walking to and from the new center safer.

“We put it in to encourage students to — instead of walk-ing up and down Coddington Road — actually use the path-way, which we feel is much safer,” Couture said.

While the finished products are intended to make life easier for students, for some the con-struction itself is untimely.

Junior Stacey Lawrence said it was inconvenient the workout room will be closed for renova-tions during the only semester she will be living in a Circle. But Lawrence said that new additions, such as the convenience store, take away the feeling of detach-ment from the campus.

“After living in Landon for two years and being so close to everything, it was a weird feel-ing to be constantly immersed in your schoolwork,” she said. “With the Circles, you can actually come back and it feels like you’re going home and your day is done.”

Lawrence said she was con-fused as to why the college chose to expand the Circle Apartments.

“I don’t get why they’re try-ing to become Ithaca University,” she said. “There’s plenty of places off-campus for people to go. I feel that the money could be better spent elsewhere.”

Junior Marc Phillips, who lives in a Circle Apartment, said it makes sense that the college would add services available within the apartment complex.

“Personally, I think it’s a good idea to expand the community cen-ter to keep in line with the growing student population,” he said.

Founding dean leaves enduring legacy Construction on campusprogresses

by elma gOnzalez assistant news editor

Tompkins Consolidated Area Transit has partnered with Ithaca College this semester to offer late-night service with half-hour stops Thursdays through Saturdays.

The new service took ef-fect Aug. 18 and will continue throughout the year as a pilot pro-gram. Routes 11 and 90 from the Commons to the college offer ser-vice every half hour from 9 p.m. to 2 a.m. Thursdays and Fridays and from 11 p.m. to 2 a.m. Saturdays. The old schedule ran every hour until 1:30 a.m.

Brian McAree, vice president of student affairs and campus life, said the college began discussing the pos-sibility of extending TCAT services during the spring semester. McAree, along with Assistant Vice President Anthony Hopson and Common Council Member Jennifer Dotson, sat down with the representatives of public transit to begin the process.

McAree said the college pursued the initiative to encourage students to ride the TCAT rather than walk back and forth to campus on streets like 96B that don’t have sidewalks. He also said offering transportation would reduce the number of stu-

dents wandering South Hill at night and disturbing neighbors.

“Students walking up 96B is a problem as well as Hudson Street and Coddington Road,” he said. “Our goal is to have students utilize the service, have a safe transport to and from downtown and also hopefully reduce the difficulties some of our neighbors experience with students walking through the neighborhoods.”

McAree said the college will have to fund part of the project, but de-clined to comment on the amount. He said the service is a pilot pro-gram and the college will determine whether to continue working with TCAT on the initiative once they know if it is cost effective.

Freshman Beatriz Montilla used TCAT during the summer and said she is excited to take advantage of the new service this fall.

“It will save people a lot of mon-ey because you wont have to pay for a cab,” she said. “It will mean that a lot more people will go out because they will be able to come back later instead of having to put a limit on when they come back.”

The Student Government Asso-ciation also drew up a transportation plan for students, but for a slightly different purpose.

Last year, SGA designed a shuttle proposal to provide transportation for students to travel from campus to the Circle Apartments and downtown.

Robert Flaherty, vice president of communications for SGA, said the shuttle proposal aims to provide sus-tainable transportation for students during the day, as opposed to the new TCAT service which provides late-night public transit. However, he said, SGA applauds the college and TCAT’s efforts.

“I don’t think it goes far enough,

and that is why [the shuttle pro-posal] is of such importance,” he said. “But it is definitely a step in the right direction.”

Doug Swarts, service develop-ment manager of TCAT, said the new service is a way to reach out to the college community, and TCAT is happy to meet its passengers’ needs.

“It will make transit more appeal-ing not just to students, but anyone who uses the service at that time,” he said. “It’s good for the passengers, good for the community, good for us.”

TCAT adds late transport

From left, Rudy Paolangeli, Ronald Nicoson, Rod Serling and John Keshishoglou pose Oct. 19, 1967 at one of Serling’s public lectures. Keshishoglou was known informally among his peers as “Dr. Kesh.”

c. haDley Smith PhOtOgRaPh cOllectiON/ithaca cOllege

Students outside the Roy h. Park School of communications stand in line to get on the tcat. this semester, the buses will run later hours.

Rachel ORlOw/the ithacaN

COUtUre said the new pathway will offer a safer alternative route.

Page 4: 09.01.2011

4 The Ithacan NewS Thursday, September 1, 2011

school. The IC 20/20 plan states that this will use a “themes and perspectives approach” where liberal arts courses will focus on a real-world issue, such as environmental sustainability, and explore different perspectives on the issue at hand.

Kelly said a new student excellence center for advising students about taking advantage of school integration will most likely be operational next fall. She said advising will be mandatory and will complement faculty advising.

To compete with public colleges and universi-ties, small private liberal-arts colleges must mar-ket programs that translate to the working world or risk students perceiving them as out-of-touch and overpriced, according to a 2009 Chronicle of Higher Education study.

President Tom Rochon said integrative cur-riculums are a current topic of national discussion in forums of higher education, but the college will be the first to institute one.

“The general education ideas in IC 20/20 around an integrative general education are na-tionally path-breaking [and] truly transformative,” he said. “We’re setting our goals extremely high.”

Rochon said IC 20/20 is a vision en route to becoming a plan, and the college has not decided on all the specifics. He said it mainly outlines what the college wants to accomplish by 2020, which is to provide students with skills to suc-ceed in a world where the economy and technol-ogies are ever-changing. Rochon said that level of proficiency is the ultimate goal.

He said the plan provides needed direction for the college as an institution and will help it keep with the changing times.

“The vision taken in its totality — if accom-plished — will project Ithaca College to a posi-tion of adapting to the educational needs of the

21st century more than any other college or uni-versity that I’m aware of,” he said.

Laurie Arliss, professor and chair in the com-munication studies department, said she and her department played a large role in recommending the new curriculum.

“There are still details to work out, but the theme and perspective approach seem to be getting people thinking about what they teach in new ways — and in exciting ways — to bring [theme and perspective] together,” she said.

The plan also seeks to increase diversity throughout the campus by setting a goal of reach-ing 20 percent African, Latino/a, Asian and Native American students by 2020.

Rochon said increasing diversity has always been a goal of the college’s, but adding the 2020

deadline and definite quota will make diversity move further and faster.

Kelly said the plan does not mean the college is operating poorly, but that it needs to find a new vision for succeeding in the future. She said many initiatives draw on programs already used to strengthen and broaden them.

“To have a complete break from things that we were doing would suggest that somehow we were doing nothing, while clearly that’s not the case,” she said.

Rochon said the college will figure out more details in the next three years, and the last six years will probably focus on implementing a clear plan by 2020. He said the class of 2015 will see the beginnings of the plan but most of it will likely begin after they graduate.

New brand welcomed by faculty

Speakers urge freshmen to step up

IC 20/20 to integrate core curriculumvision

from page 1

President Tom Rochon and Marisa Kelly discuss the updated iC 20/20 vision plan that the board of trustees approved in July. The first initiatives will go into effect during the spring semester.

andRew BuRaCzensKi/The iThaCan

brand from page 1

ally aren’t known for any one — or a number of — particular things in the marketplace.”

Last March, the Office of Mar-keting Com-m u n i c a t i o n s distributed a survey to cur-rent and pro-spective stu-dents, alumni and faculty to gain feedback.

The original idea featured three options — “Ready”

with a check mark, “Ready or not,” with “not” crossed out and simply “Ready.” Reuben said the college ultimately altered the “Ready” slogan after reviewing feedback from the survey and additional focus groups.

Though Reuben said time will ultimately show the campaign’s success, feedback has already been positive — more so than during the college’s failed mascot search, which was discontinued over the summer.

Scott Hamula, associate profes-sor and chair of the strategic com-munications department, said he is excited to use the college’s new visuals in his PowerPoint presen-tation for the college’s open house event, a task that will be easier with a clear brand.

“Now that we have a consistent logo, name treatment, font and col-or, hopefully it will create a stronger Ithaca for messaging, which repre-sents who we are and what we do,” he said.

Last Thursday, faculty and staff saw the updated logo and “Ready” campaign for the first time.

Diane Rogers, a risk manage-ment assistant in the Division of Legal Affairs, said she enjoyed the “Ready” stories, which showcased students and their experiences.

“Those stories will speak vol-umes as far as getting us out into the world,” she said.

Along with the new logo, the college also instituted a licens-ing and trademark policy that protects other unauthorized businesses or institutions from selling merchandise using the college’s name. Vendors are re-quired to go through an approval process to sell products with the college’s name or logo.

For now, Reuben said the logo and name can only be dis-played in navy blue, gold, gray, white or black, which means the colorful tie-dye or purple shirts students see in the bookstore are no longer allowed by the college’s licensing plan.

Reuben said the college will consider bringing back college merchandise in other colors during a marketing meeting in September.

Hamula said the college has developed a message that cap-tures an experience distinct to the college.

“We’re very fortunate that they were able to bring that down to one word which I think the overwhelming majority of students, faculty, staff, parents and various stakeholders agree with — ‘Ready,’” he said.

gathering at 11 a.m. Monday in Ben Light Gymnasium.

The two-hour ceremony opened with faculty, alumni and student speakers proceeding into the gym, accompanied by Ludwig Maurer’s “Maestoso alla Marcia,” the tradi-tional processional arrangement.

Shortly after the procession, Ithaca Brass, the college’s resident brass quintet, and the faculty vo-cal ensemble performed the col-lege’s official anthem, “Ithaca Forever.” Marc Webster, assistant professor for music performance and performance studies, sang an operatic rendition of “The Star-Spangled Banner.”

Rochon presided over the ser-vice, which differed slightly from last year’s Convocation. This ceremony was formatted to include a variety of student and faculty speakers present-ing research projects. The students’ individual journeys also served as the event’s central theme.

After a brief introduction from Marisa Kelly, the college’s newly se-lected provost and vice president of academic affairs, Jennifer Muller, as-sistant professor for the department of anthropology, challenged the new class to pursue their dreams, even if they seem unrealistic.

“Part of the intellectual chal-lenge and reward is putting all of the pieces together,” she said. “That’s how you find out who you are as an individual.”

Joyti Jiandani ’11 opened the academic presentations by bringing attention to diversity on campus. Jiandani said students should be mindful of the importance of inter-actions on a predominately white campus. She then put a twist on one

of the college’s mottos.“A commitment to excellence

does mean a commitment to aca-demic achievement, but it also means a commitment to self-explo-ration,” she said. “What better way to find out about ourselves than through interactions with others?”

Jack Powers, assistant professor for the department of television and radio, touched on the faculty’s ac-tivities outside of the classroom by explaining his work on the popular show “Modern Family.”

“Students don’t know that teach-ing is only part of our job,” he said. “Academic scholarship is the notion of adding to the world’s knowledge.”

Wrapping up the presentations, Kelly introduced five staff members who received the college’s annual faculty excellence awards.

This year’s winners were Marina Caillaud, associate professor for the department of biology; Mead Loop, associate professor for the department of journalism; Jeffery Meyer, assistant professor for the department of music performance; Gladys Varona-Lacey, professor for the department of modern lan-guages and literatures; and Fred Wilcox, associate professor for the department of writing.

Lawrence Alleva ’71, vice chair for the board of trustees and this year’s salutation speaker, provided the freshmen with a piece of advice he said he found useful as a student.

“This is your home for the next four years,” he said. “Get to know the people on campus and forge bonds with them. Seek knowledge and explore opportunities inside and outside the college.”

Alleva then introduced senior Scott Nachlis, president of the Student Government Association, who said students should take any

opportunities they are presented with because they never know where they could end up.

“College is all about taking that first step,” he said. “Who knows? Maybe one of you will be standing in my position giving this speech to anxious freshmen in four years.”

Before introducing Rochon, Kelly directed the audience’s attention to a video on the projector screen. The film opened with panoramas of the wonders of the world followed by a narration by actor Sean Connery.

The video was a visual narra-tion of Constantine P. Cavafy’s 1911 poem, “Ithaca.”

Kelly gave the closing remarks and invited everyone to a picnic in the sunny academic quad immedi-ately following its conclusion.

Outlining the main theme of this year’s Convocation, Rochon said the end of the road isn’t what matters most in someone’s career, but rather the experiences along the way.

“Greatness lies in the journey it-self,” he said. “Not the destination.”

Hamula said a single logo will send a stronger message.

Freshman samantha hershfield draws her name on the class of 2015 banner among classmates Monday during the iC Picnic after Convocation.

MiChelle Boulé/The iThaCan

convocation from page 1

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Thursday, September 1, 2011 NewS The Ithacan 5

First-year book readies freshmen for journeyby marissa smith

chief copy editor

President Tom Rochon opened the First-Year Reading Initiative ceremony Tuesday by posing a question to an audience of 1,570 freshmen students.

“You will all be here on an under-graduate journey for the next four years,” he said. “What are you going to make of that journey?”

The First-Year Reading Initia-tive book of choice was David Malouf ’s Trojan-War-based novel “Ransom,” the story of King Priam of Troy’s attempted journey to ransom his son Hector’s body after the Greek warrior Achilles defeats Hector in battle. Achilles drags the body around the city in retribution for his friend Patroclus, who died at Hector's hand.

The theme of life's journey was reflected throughout the event and in small discussions.

Attendees of previous FYRI programs would have found them-selves in a different atmosphere at this year’s event. The FYRI coor-dinators organized student seat-ing using the last name of every small group discussion facilitator, one step of many that improved the proceedings.

Jim Swafford, associate professor of English and new coordinator of FYRI, was the primary speaker dur-ing the event.

Swafford said the board would have to assess the program for its potentials and improve it based on the results.

“We’ve tried to make informa-tion about the book more available to students in the summer and tried

to make going to these small group discussions seem a kind of natural thing to do, rather than optional,” Swafford said.

With the seating plan in place — something he said was imple-mented to control the previous “organized chaos” of the event — nearly every student successfully ended up in a small group discuss-ing the novel.

Swafford also presented “Ransom” to every orientation session this sum-mer. He had freshmen look at a few passages in an attempt to get them interested in the book.

“It’s a book that sells itself,” he said. “It’s both emotionally powerful and intellectually stimulating.”

When it came to students bringing the same enthusiasm for “Ransom” to small group discus-sions, however, they seemed more wary of the novel than Swafford.

“It was way over my head,” fresh-man Rachel Darcy said. “There are some interesting topics in it, but the book was kind of hard for me to finish.”

Freshman Brandon Glass was direct about how he approached the book.

“People told me it was a lot like the movie ‘Troy,’ so I just watched that,” he said.

Some students, however, seemed to equate their transition to college to that of Priam’s journey.

In a small group discussion, freshman Marc Gonzalez said the idea of being on his own in college was an overwhelming journey.

“Because we’re moving into col-lege, we’re going to entirely new places with entirely different people,”

he said. “We’re losing our support base and we don’t have parents to do our laundry or give us money. So we have to take responsibility for what we do now.”

In the same group, Glass said the college experience was a journey worth taking.

“It’s all about the journey,” he said. “It’s a nervous excitement be-cause you’re excited to go on with your life, but then you’re nervous of almost a fear of the unknown.”

Swafford said he is also excited for the future of the FYRI program. The next book will not be chosen until next summer, before freshmen orientation begins.

“The selection committee has always tried to choose something that addresses, one way or another, that basic question of who we are as human beings and what our aspira-tions are,” he said.

Swafford said the book is not just about growing up and away

from tradition, but also being in-novative in an effort to become more productive.

When Theresa Radley, dis-cussion facilitator and assistant director of student involvement, asked students what the next step on their journey to personal growth was, the response was a bit less profound.

“Googling how to do my own laundry,” Glass said. “And just find-ing my way to classes Wednesday.”

From left, Freshmen Liam Joy and Samantha Brigher, facilitator Theresa Radley and freshman Matthew Gomez sit outside Job Hall on Tuesday in a small group discussion analyzing "Ransom," the FYRI book about a king's journey.

SHawn STeIneR/THe ITHacan

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6 The Ithacan Thursday, September 1, 2011

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Thursday, September 1, 2011 NewS The Ithacan 7

ICView editor brings fresh ideas

The time is NyeBill Nye “the Science Guy,” a ’77 Cornell University alumnus, visited his alma mater Saturday to dedicate a new clock that displays solar noon as opposed to legal noon, displayed in Frank T. Rhodes Hall. Nearly 800 students packed Statler Auditorium to hear his words of advice.

RACHeL oRLow/THe ITHACAN

ICView, Ithaca College’s alumni maga-zine, brought in a new senior editor this semester. Robin Roger, former editor of the UT Journal at the University of Tampa, joined ICView’s editorial board last June.

The magazine has come under increased scrutiny since the publi-cation of a controversial account of an alumna’s ex-perience in the West Bank in 2008. And Roger’s hire comes at a time of transi-tion for the college with the implementation of the IC 20/20 vision plan and the institution-wide rebranding initiative.

Roger earned a master’s degree in jour-nalism from UNC Chapel Hill where she received a Park Fellowship, an award that is similar to the college’s Park Scholar program.

Assistant News Editor Elma Gonzalez sat down with Roger to discuss her goals for the magazine.

Elma Gonzalez: How did you become in-volved with ICView?

Robin Roger: I saw the listing for the job position and it sounded like a really exciting place to be. There are going to be a lot of ex-citing changes going on, and I wanted to be a part of making the magazine even better than it already is.

EG: What do you bring to the magazine?

RR: I bring a lot of experience in not just alumni magazines, but journalism in gen-eral. I have worked as assistant editor pre-viously at another publication, so when I came to my interview I had a lot of ideas about how to improve the magazine. I think we can improve it by adding big-ger, better photos and taking on topics that

are timely and relevant to our readers. I’d like to take on even more substantive topics that can attract a wider audience.

My philosophy is that a good alumni magazine or college magazine could stand against some of the best magazines on the newsstands, and people would want to pick them up regardless if they come to school here or not.

EG: What are your duties as senior editor?

RR: Everything from concept creation to de-ciding what we are going to include in the magazine. Assigning features, writing some, editing content, assigning photos, looking at the proofs as they come through, getting direction on design and working with the printer at the back end. So it’s everything from beginning to end of putting together a magazine.

EG: You came in two months ago. How has it been so far?

RR: I stepped in toward the very end of the production process of the last magazine so I can’t take a lot of credit, but we have already gotten lots of great feedback for the last issue. So that was really gratifying to see. Then go-ing forward into this next issue, there is a lot of excitement and enthusiasm carried over from that last issue. Also, because I am now in the position and bringing new ideas to the table, I think everyone is really geared up for this next issue.

EG: What are your personal goals for this year?

RR: We hope to publish this next issue at the end of the semester, beginning of December, so my goal would be to put together this next issue. It’s going to be the first one at ICView I’ll be working on beginning to end. My goal is to put together a strong issue that builds on what we have done in the past.

ROGER said ICView can improve on its past success.

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8 The Ithacan Thursday, September 1, 2011

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Thursday, September 1, 2011 NewS The Ithacan 9

College & CitySakai education software to succeed Blackboard Ithaca College has switched from Blackboard to Sakai, an education software used for com-munication and collaboration between students and professors. There are currently more than 350 educational organizations that use the software today.

Blackboard will be available until fall 2012 so professors are able to gradually transition from one software to the other.

Students can collaborate with professors to create project sites and use Sakai for extracurricular organi-zations and non-academic programs.

Ithaca College recognized among top institutions

The Princeton Review once again ranked Ithaca College as one of the top 376 colleges in America.

The college ranked number three in the “Best College Radio” category and 18 in “Best College Theater.” The college also made the “Best in the Northeast” section.

Students surveyed for the guide had high praise for faculty at the college, according to the Princeton Review.

The book profiles about 15 per-cent of America’s 2,500 four-year colleges and ranks the top 20 schools in 62 categories.

Cornell to lead program on environment education

Cornell University has been chosen to head up a development program that will bring together educators from diverse back-

grounds to exchange ideas.Cornell will receive $2 million

annually from the Environmental Protection Agency for the project.

The goal of the program is to de-termine whether diverse groups of educators — given opportunities to network — will develop innovative environmental education practices.

Peggy R. Williams chosen for women’s equity board

President Emerita Peggy Wil-liams has been elected to the board of the American Association of University Wom-en, an organiza-tion that advo-cates for equity for women and girls through educa-tion, philanthropy, and research.

The former president of Ithaca College was among 10 directors-at-large elected to serve a two-year term.

Williams also served on the American Council on Education and on the NCAA Presidents Council Subcommittee on Gender and Diversity Issues.

Williams was named president of the college in 1997 and retired in 2008.

Rod Serling to be honored in upcoming conference

The Rod Serling Conference, honoring the life and work of former Ithaca College lecturer and creator of the famous “Twilight Zone,” will be held Sept. 9-10.

The two-day conference will begin

at 8 a.m. Sept. 9 in Emerson Suites and will feature sessions and panels.

Bill D’Elia ’69 will give a speech on television storytelling at 8 p.m and at 1:45 p.m. Sept. 10, the conference will conclude with a “Twilight Zone” marathon from 8 p.m. to midnight.

Local brewery to begin working on new facility The Ithaca Beer Company broke ground on their new brewery last week. The $3 million facility will be 15,000-square-feet and include a pub and welcome center.

Company employees, share-holders, family, the Chamber of Commerce, and city officials stood by as Dan Mitchell, founder of Ithaca Beer Company, dug on the 10-acre site Friday.

This year the company will have brewed 180,000 cases of beer. The new facility will have the capacity to brew half a million cases of beer a year. The offices, tasting room and pub open in late May 2012.

FLEFF awards first place to Chen’s animated film The Finger Lakes Environmen-tal Film Festival and the Global Alliance Against Traffic in Women awarded Xuan Chen’s animated film, “Out” the first-place $250 prize in the summer exhibition “Trafficked Identities,” an online film competition. “Out” illustrates China’s eco-nomical impact on migrant work-ers during the ‘90s.

Chen was born in China in 1979, but moved to Berkeley, Calif. in 2001. Her films have been shown

in exhibitions and film festivals throughout the United States.

“Out” also received the New Vi-son’s Award from New Mexico.

Indian journalist to speak about global war on terror

The Distinguished Visiting Writ-ers Series will host a reading by Amitava Kumar, Indian writer and journalist, at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Clarke Lounge.

Kumar’s new book, “Foreigner Carrying in the Crook of His Arm a Tiny Bomb,” re-flects on the global war on terror.

Kumar was educated in both India and the United States and works as a professor of English at Vassar College.

Kumar has received recognition from the South Asian Journalists As-sociation, Norman Mailer Writers Colony, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and Wesleyan University’s Writers Conference.

Ithaca College to utilize electric-charged cleaner This year the college switched to an environmentally friendly and more technological way to re-move germs. The Ionator, a spray bottle that uses tap water and batteries to give it a small electrical charge, cleans glass, stainless steel, wood, tile, carpeting and other surfaces.

The bottle, which is powered by rechargeable batteries and made

from recycled plastic, has lifespan of about eight years.

The Ionator is part of the col-lege’s green initiative and was implemented to reduce cleaning costs. It will also be used as a sub-ject for Assistant Professor Anne Stork’s course “Environmental Sci-ence and Technology,” in which the device will be tested.

Local museum to feature Cuban artist’s exhibition

Cornell University’s Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art will showcase Carlos Garaicoa’s ex-hibition “Making Amends” from 4:30 to 7 p.m. today.

The free exhibition was inspired by his home in Cuba and explores social and political issues with a fo-cus on using art for social change.

The Molly Macmillan Jazz Trio will provide live music at the event and the gallery will of-fer refreshments and art activities. The exhibit is hosted by the Finger Lakes Wine Cellars.

ICTV student producers noted as national finalists College Broadcasters Inc. rec-ognized 10 ICTV producers as finalists for the National Student Production contest. The list in-cludes students and alumni. “To a Pulp,” “ICTV Every-where,” “Take Back the Tap,” “Hold That Thought,” “Invading the Ev-erglades” and “Bound by Hope” were named finalists. The winners will be announced at the National College Media Con-vention from Oct. 26-30.

August 1

CRIMINAL TRESPASSING LOCATION: Athletic and Events Center SUMMARY: Officer reported unknown person(s) entered the building. Inves-tigation pending. Master Patrol Officer Dirk Hightchew.

LARCENy LOCATION: Gannett Center SUMMARY: Caller reported unknown per-son stole books. Investigation pending. Master Patrol Officer Bruce Holmstock.

August 2

CRIMINAL TRESPASSINGLOCATION: Garden Apartments SUMMARY: Caller reported an unknown person entered an apartment. Investiga-tion pending. Sergeant Ron Hart.

August 3

LARCENy LOCATION: Upper Campus SUMMARY: Caller reported an unknown person stole scaffolding planks. Investi-gation pending. Patrol Officer Brad Bates.

LARCENy LOCATION: Upper Campus SUMMARY: Caller reported an unknown person stole wooden boards. Investigation pending. Patrol Officer Brad Bates.

August 11

CRIMINAL TRESPASSINGLOCATION: Whalen Center SUMMARY: Caller reported an unknown person kicked a screen, which caused

damage to the screen and pictures inside the room. Investigation pending. Patrol Officer Brad Bates.

August 15

MEdICAL ASSIST LOCATION: Circle ApartmentsSUMMARY: Caller reported a person got a back injury while jumping on furniture at 1 a.m. Person was transported to CMC. Patrol Officer Jay VanVolkinburg.

August 17

LARCENy LOCATION: Terrace Dining HallSUMMARY: Caller reported an unknown person stole two signs. Investigation pend-ing. Sergeant Ron Hart.

August 22

MEdICAL ASSIST LOCATION: Upper QuadSUMMARY: Caller reported a person tripped and sustained a toe laceration. Person declined medical assistance and was transported to the Health Center. Patrol Officer Brad Bates.

FoR ThE ComPLETE SaFETy Log, go to www.theithacan.org/news.

KUmaR

Public Safety Incident LogSELECTED ENTRIES FROM AUG. 1 TO AUG. 22.

WILLIamS

Key

CMC – Cayuga Medical CenterCCV – College Code ViolationDWI – Driving while intoxicatedIFD – Ithaca Fire DepartmentIPD – Ithaca Police DepartmentMVA – Motor vehicle accidentSASP – Student Auxiliary Safety Patrol

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10 The Ithacan Thursday, September 1, 2011

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editorials

12 The Ithacan OpInIOn Thursday, September 1, 2011

Single CopieS of the ithacan are available free of Charge from authorized diStribution pointS on the ithaCa College CampuS and in the ithaCa Community. multiple CopieS and mail SubSCriptionS are available from the offiCe of the ithacan. pleaSe Call for rateS.

AAron edwArds editor in Chiefwhitney fAber managing editormegAn devlin opinion editorkelsey o’connor newS editorelmA gonzAlez aSSiStant newS editorericA pAlumbo aSSiStant newS editorkelsey fowler aCCent editor

sheA o’meArA aSSiStant aCCent editorkevin mccAll SportS editorhArlAn green-tAub aSSiStant SportS editormichelle boulé photo editoremily pArk aSSiStant photo editorrAchel orlow aSSiStant photo editorcArly gill online media editor

mArissA smith Chief Copy editorsArA webb Chief proofreadermolly Apfelroth deSign editorflorA wAng aSSiStant deSign editorrAchel heiss SaleS managerhonest bodkin online editormichAel serino ithaCan adviSer

The Ithacan 269 Roy H. park Hall, Ithaca CollegeIthaca, n.Y. 14850-7258(607) 274-3208 | Fax (607) 274-1376

[email protected]

making the right mark

After analyzing two years worth of feedback, the Office of Marketing

Communications effectively captures the college’s vision for the future.

Ithaca College is getting “Ready” for another shot at branding itself. And this time, it’s on the right track.

Yesterday marked the official public launch of the college’s new brand identity. The campaign, which consists of advertisements, an updated website and a new college logo, uses success sto-ries of students, alumni and faculty to showcase how the college has prepared them for the future. The rebranding initiative runs in tandem with the IC 20/20 goals of creating a unified vision for the college. Rachel Reuben, associate vice presi-dent in the Office of Marketing Communications, along with her team, used feedback from two year’s worth of online surveys and focus group discussions to redefine the college and increase its competitive edge among other universities. Unlike the failed Bomber mascot search last spring, the search committee came out strong with its new logo design this fall. The committee’s proposal of three mascot finalists — flying squir-rel, lake beast and phoenix — weren’t emblematic of the college at all. Now, the collegiate title is freshly painted in a rich, classic blue and deep gold that captures “tradition” in every sense of the word. The logo is clear. It’s strong. And it’s actually representative of the college. With greater efforts to poll educators and students, the college can monitor its process of gradually incorporating the new logo across cam-pus. That way, when prospective students browse the Internet while searching for colleges or alumni return to campus for Fall Splash, they can expect to receive a consistent message about the college’s vision to prepare its campus community for the future — no squirrels allowed.

park pioneer John Keshishoglou’s vision of global scholarship and creativity lives on in

the School of Communications.

From inside the studio walls of Newswatch 16 to the design labs of Nanyang Technological University in Singapore, signature traces of

John Keshishoglou, founding dean of the Ithaca College School of Communications, remain. Known to graduates as “Dr. Kesh,” the pioneer of media education passed away Aug. 24. His support for international scholarship and creative activity has given Ithaca College a competitive edge among other top academic institutions with prestigious communications programs. On campus, students get practical experience working with the college to plan events like Con-vocation and design materials for its rebranding campaign. They also serve the local community by broadcasting news to 26,000 homes in Tompkins County and providing promotional services to orga-nizations like the Ithaca Health Alliance. Today, Park faculty members model Kesh’s dedi-cation to the students in their willingness to shape students’ professional and creative growth in their communications endeavors. Were it not for Kesh’s global outlook and belief that media should be grounded in social respon-sibility, students would not receive the hands-on experience the Park School offers to get them ready for the professional world.

comment online.Now you can be heard in print or on the Web.

Write a letter to the editor at [email protected] or leave a comment on commentaries and editorials at theithacan.org.

Letters must be 250 words or less, emailed or dropped off by 5 p.m. Monday in Park 269.

Snap JUDgment

Best buy Where do

you purchase your college

textbooks? “I WaIt untIl a Week Into classes to see If the professors are actually startIng to use It, and If they are I buy them onlIne because It’s nor-mally cheaper.” andrew hicks ’13sports media

Watch more Snap Judgments at

theithacan.org.

“I found half.com. you can get the old edItIons of books for lIke 75 cents. chegg.com Is another good sIte.”dan lesko ’15 televisionradio

“there’s thIs WebsIte called bIgWords.com and you can just go there and type In the Isbn and It brIngs up the cheapest books.”claire dehm ’14integratedmarketingcommunications

“I’m goIng to go to all my classes and see WhIch books I have to buy.”michaelmyhre ’12computer science

“I got all my books at the bookstore. I just shoWed up on move-In day and bought them all there.”matthewmorrison ’15music education

Page 13: 09.01.2011

All opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect those of The Ithacan. To write a guest commentary, contact Opinion Editor Megan Devlin at 274-3208.

Thursday, September 1, 2011 OpiniOn The ithacan 13

Guest commentary

Victoria … what a beautiful name. It was delightfully easy for my wife and me to choose this name for our beloved

daughter. The years seemed like days as Victoria grew from an infant to a college freshman in front of our eyes. Victoria entered Ithaca College in August 2010. She was full of life and energy, cheerful and beautiful, and had brought much joy to my wife and me. If you had ever seen her, you might even think that she was walking in midair. We still remember vividly her exuberant voice as she spoke with my wife on the phone that cold Friday night in February: “I love you too mom, bye.” She was an intelligent pre-med student, and was on her way to becoming a great surgeon someday. But her dream was dashed by one night of drinking. Something happened to Victoria after a party that Friday night. Words cannot describe our feelings when two officers came to our house to inform us that Victoria was found lying on the snow not far from the house where the party was. Alcohol use was related to her passing. Victoria was well aware of the safety issues regarding alcohol. She said she knew her limit, that she would not drink and drive, that she would not walk alone. What I have learned from my daughter is that no matter how knowledge-able a person might be, something can always go wrong. Victoria once said that if she did not drink, she would not have any friends. But true friendship should evolve around loving and car-ing for one another, not drinking. Though Victoria did not make it to her 18th birthday in this world, many of her friends came to our home that day to celebrate the time they had shared with her. My family still thinks of Victoria every day, as do many of her friends. What attracted her to so many friends was neither her cheerful personality nor her physical

beauty; it was her willingness to help others. If she were here right now, she would say this to you: “Please, please, please learn from my mistake. If you learn from my mistake, then my death will not be in vain.” As the semester and the parties begin, I challenge you with this question: Are you going to live this semester as usual or are you going to change from a culture-follower to a culture-changer? I would like to invite you to become a culture-changer by making the Victoria Pledge, an online pledge to abstain from alcohol until 21. This could be a sacrifice because you might miss out on something, but there is something else far greater worth fighting for in life. When you learn that more undergraduate students will ultimately die from alcohol-related causes than those who will go on to receive masters and Ph.D. degrees, you might pause and think it

over. You might say, “This is the culture. There is not much I can do.” Or you can say, “This is tragic. I am willing to make a sacrifice to help change the culture.” Your sacrifice will make this world a better place by helping to change the drinking culture that is ruining the lives of so many young people. And who knows — the life you change, or even save, might be your own. The Victoria Pledge is neither about Victoria nor my fam-ily, but about your future and our world. The culture can be changed, one person at a time, starting with ourselves. To make the Victoria Pledge, visit www.ithaca.edu/orgs/awaken/victoria

Joseph chenG is an associate professor of finance and international business. Email him at [email protected]

Father responds to daughter’s death with pledge

I tossed and turned in my London hotel room cot as sirens pierced the night. Something big is hap-

pening, I thought, shrugging off the chaotic noise as normal city activity. When a lull in the shrieking fi-nally arrived, I quickly drifted off to sleep. On the morning of Aug. 7, the newspapers told of horrific events that occurred the night before. I was shocked this all happened my first night in London and even more unsettled that I had no knowledge of it. For the next three days, stories of the violence escalated, and took on the moniker “The London Riots of 2011.” The riots supposedly began with the police shooting of 29-year-old Mark Duggan in a poor suburb of London. Two days before the riots, a rally of protestors demanding answers to Duggan’s murder turned violent as younger community members began to lash out at police. Rioters as young as 11 years old looted shops, set cars and buildings on fire, threw objects at police of-ficers, and even attacked and robbed innocent bystanders. The violence spread across London like blazes en-gulfing anything the rioters touched. While walking through Notting

Hill that morning, I came across a shoe store devastated by one of the riots. The window was shattered and inside, overturned shoeboxes and their contents covered the floor. I felt uneasy seeing the destroyed shop, realizing that riots like these could happen anywhere. Despite this realization, I felt naïvely calm for most of my trip. For locals residing in impoverished areas, though, the fear was palpable. It quickly spread beyond these neighborhoods and beyond London, which caused a national panic. This distress provoked people throughout London and the rest of

the world to ask the same question of the rioters: Why? Prime Minister David Cameron and his conservative cronies reacted by labeling the rioters as irrespon-sible “criminals.” They believe the rioters should be punished, not only by court sentencing, but also by removing their welfare benefits and perhaps even their private property. While I agree that punish-ment for this violent behavior is in order, I find the proposed “solu-tions” misguided and, quite frankly, moronic. To take away welfare and property would further isolate troubled youths from society, create

thousands of homeless teenagers and set the stage for future unrest. The root cause of the riots can’t be ignored. Limited government investment in social services gives little opportunity for these youths to become successful members of society. It often leaves them without hope or encouragement from their broken communities. But investment in programs for character education, welfare and social services decreases the risk of conflicts arising in areas where both income and aspirations are low. The only issue is that these programs cost money. Both the U.K. and U.S. governments have fiscal deficits. We can’t let a lack of funding halt progress. While I have always had what I needed to live comfortably and to pursue my ambitions, the rioters are among a majority who do not have these luxuries. But they should be given a chance. The London riots demonstrated the citizens’ strength to overcome social hardships. The victims were not only shopkeepers and residents who lost everything they own, but also the rioters themselves who, in the struggle for prosperity, have always lost. To watch a video interview with Lyons go to www.ithacan.org.

Rioting youths need support to quell future unrestGuest commentary

Corporate rule leads america

During Mitt Romney’s speech to Iowans in mid-August, an audience

member called out “tax corpora-tions.” The former Massachusetts governor sparked controversy with his response: “Corporations are people, my friend.” Romney’s statement should have engendered outrage in America. It equated large finan-cial investments and betting schemes worth millions to the income of the average American — who is probably struggling to find decent work. The statement was rendered controversial in the mass media, but it demands a larger critique and raises the question of why Americans aren’t marching together in protest. Sadly, the fight against cor-porations is listless. The reality is, according to several legal and political loopholes, that U.S. corporations are in fact consid-ered people. The Supreme Court case Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission overturned years of judicial precedence with its ruling that made corporations immune from limitations on campaign spending. If we legally permit corpora-tions to fund political campaigns, it isn’t really the people who elect leaders. And based on the realities of our political systems, it isn’t so outrageous for Romney to use the words “corporation” and “people” interchangeably. The pervasive authority of cor-porate interest gives Americans a false sense of choice when politics collide with big business: You can either re-elect a president whose top donors include oil companies and Goldman Sachs, or select a Tea Party patriot whose primary donors are corporations with similar interests. If we do not critique the simi-lar ways in which private entities fund Democrats and Republicans, then we accept and normalize the extent to which the upper echelon of business and society dictate our country’s decisions. By adhereing to “corporate rights,” socio-economic hierar-chies continue to grow. According to CNN Money, nearly two-thirds of corporations pay no federal income taxes. And if the corpora-tions’ free ride isn’t enough, the Congressional Budget Office found loss in revenue from tax cuts for the wealthy. Yet those with the most refuse to help those with the least. To eradicate inequalities we have to recognize that system-atic problems mask these unfair distributions of wealth and create political clout. Until we blend words like “democracy,” “equality” and “opportunity” into the main-stream lexicon, Americans will continue to wallow in economic and social misery.

Joseph chenG

Victoria Cheng (far right) and two friends blueberry picking last summer. Cheng, who passed away in February, was a 2010 graduate of Ithaca High School and a biology major at Ithaca College.

CourteSy oF joSepH CHeng

Dylan lyons

policemen and a police dog detain a rebellious youth Aug. 7 in enfield town Centre. the riots quickly spread across London for four days.

rex FeAtu/ASSoCIAted preSS

chrIs ZIValIch

POLITICAL(OFF)-BEAT

chrIs ZIValIch is a senior journalism major. Email him at [email protected].

Dylan lyons is a sophomore journalism major. Email him at [email protected].

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14 The Ithacan Thursday, September 1, 2011

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College generation strives to hold onto previous decade

All That

Kenan & Kel

Clarissa

Explains it All

Doug

Hey Arnold!

Rocko’s

Modern Life

1994-2005

1996-2005

1991-1994

1991-1994

1996-2004

1993-1996

July 25,2011-present

July 25,2011-present

July 25,2011-present

July 25,2011-present

Starts Sept. 5, 2011

Starts Sept. 5, 2011

12:00 a.m.

12:30 a.m.

1:00 a.m. MWF

1:30 a.m. MWF

1:00 a.m. T/TH

1:30 a.m. T/TH

“The ’90s Are ALL ThAT” scheduLe

More shows available online at: 90sareallthat.teennick.com

currenT runOriginAL run

Air Time

shOw TiTLe

RevivalRetro

From left, juniors Jamie Tritschler and Rachel Rothenberg model their best ’90s wear Friday at Titus Flats park in Ithaca. They are producing an ICTV show about a student trapped in 1997.

MIChelle Boulé/The IThaCan

ShEA o’MEArA ASSiSTAnT ACCEnT EDiToR

Leaving behind the comforts of their teen years and stepping into new responsibility, today’s 20-somethings are becoming increasingly nostalgic for a time with less stress and more slime.

While most of the college-age population only dream about return-ing to simpler times, juniors Rachel Rothenberg and Jaime Tritschler are turning their love of all things ’90s into a reality.

Rothenberg and Tritschler are team-ing up to produce “’97,” a television series set to air on ICTV this fall. The show follows Charlie Wheeler, who finds an old Game Boy that sends him back in time to 1997, where he must find his way home — without cell phone ser-vice or Google Maps. But along the way he finds the 21st century might not be the right fit for him.

The idea for “’97” came from Rothenberg and Tritschler’s tendency to ease the stress of late-night study sessions by listening to bands like Backstreet Boys and ‘N Sync. Tritschler said she saw the perfect opportunity to

combine her love of film with her pas-sion for her favorite era.

“We haven’t really let go of our child-hoods yet, and we figured the best thing to do is make a TV show,” Tritschler said. “You film mostly what you know.”

ICTV’s ’90s flashback will come just weeks after Nickelodeon started to air its own ode to the decade. “The ’90s Are All That,” a programming block dedicat-ed to re-runs of their top shows from the decade, aims to appeal to the love of the shows shared by dedicated fans.

Keith Dawkins, vice president and general manager of TeenNick, said the station decided to run the series because of demand. He said Nick is excited by the series’ popularity.

“The day that it premiered people said they cried when they watched the show, and it took them back to the time when they grew up,” he said.

Junior Elijah Kagan agreed to write for “’97” because he knew the show would connect to college students who want to look back on the decade they love, much like Nick’s new block of old shows.

“A lot of what went into this show

was the nostalgia growing up in a sim-pler time with no electronics to domi-nate our lives,” he said.

Ken Kimmelman, Emmy-award-winning director of “Doug,” one of Nickelodeon’s original ’90s cartoons, said he thinks people are still drawn to ’90s programming because it re-minds them of a less hectic time in their lives.

“[Doug] could pick up a pencil and he kept a diary,” he said. “He didn’t use a computer. I guess there’s a little bit of a Renaissance kind of feeling Doug had. The ’90s were quite different from after we turned the century.”

“Doug” is one of the shows current-ly being rebroadcast by TeenNick. The new series is partly in response to a pitch made by young Nick interns and staff members who grew up watching the channel.

Teal Marchande, who played the mom on the ’90s Nick sitcom “Kenan and Kel”, said people use the ideas in ’90s television as a way to recognize the challenges of daily life.

“When people watch a show like ‘Kenan and Kel,’ it’s so ridiculous and all

of us sometimes want to be ridiculous in our lives,” she said. “We understand we have awkward moments because there’s so much of that in the show.”

Even with the modern day nostalgia for the ’90s, Rothenberg and Tritschler are watching shows like “Sabrina the Teenage Witch” and “Boy Meets World” to get clothing ideas for “’97” and reminiscing about the decade’s culture and fashion. Tritschler said she’s encouraged by the reaction she gets from people when she talks about the show.

“We get completely off topic and stop talking about the TV show and start talking about our childhood instead,” she said. “It brings back a lot for people.”

Kagan said even with the stress of adult responsibilities, his generation takes the time to look back and reflect on the decade they just left behind.

“People remember those times,” he said. “They remember growing up in them, and in some way, part of me misses the ’90s.”

Look for the premiere of “’97” this December on ICTV.

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[accentuate]20 the Ithacan thursday, September 1, 2011

The day I stop using hair tools to iron my clothes I’m really going to feel like an adult.— Television personality, fashion designer and author Lauren Conrad on her less-than-contemporary method of finishing household chores.

Cooler than the ice caps Dan Griffith of The White Panda performs on the Cornell Arts Quad during a free concert Saturday night. The Cornell Concert Commission brought Griffith and his mash-up partner Tom Evans to campus after the commission’s success with rival band Super Mash Bros. last year.

AnDrEW BurACzEnSki/ThE iThACAn

Class of 2015 freshmen have more than just a hurricane to deal with during their first few weeks as undergrads. So for the rest of their college career “Year One: A College Blog” is here to help. Making it Count, an educational institu-tion that works to better students’ lives, created the blog to guide newcomers through their first college experiences. The blog is written by this year’s token fearful freshman — Flora, a Southern university girl — who will post about everything from teach-ing her grandmother how to Skype to leaving her new friends for winter break. Is anyone else looking forward to Flora’s first frat party?

— Shea O’Meara

Hard rock band KISS is getting a little soft nowadays. Funko, a pop culture toy manufacturing company, is making the band members in Plushie form. The company will release a collection of 7-inch tall KISS Plushies featuring the four original artists: Gene Simmons, ‘The Demon’; Paul Stanley, ‘The Starchild’; Ace Frehley, ‘The Spaceman’; and Peter Criss, ‘The Catman.’ The dolls are the new-est addition to a collection of Plushie pop icons that include Elvis, Spiderman and the Mad Hatter. With the new KISS figures, collectors are sure to rock and roll all night. — Shea O’Meara

Top pop stars bust out

Kelly Rowland’s hit song “Motivation” wasn’t the only thing heating up the stage last month. The singer got in a real-life dilemma when her leather top fell a bit too far south. While Rowland’s “peek” performance earned her major headline mentions, she’s hardly the only star to slip during a show. Earlier this month “Good Morning America” viewers saw more of Nicki Minaj than they expected. Both women fixed their slips and went on without miss-ing a beat. Rowland even tweeted “[I] hope you en-joyed the show and didn’t mind the peekaboo LOL!!! #kanyeshrug #stuffhap-pens.” You go, girls! — Shea O’Meara

OOPS!celebrity

tweetuntweet

InComIng CoLLege freshman wrITes abouT LIfe on Campus

pop CuLTure merChandIse Company Turns roCk Legends InTo pLushIes

blogweekof the

The NinesThe Nines in College

town has

a relaxed atmosphere, a $5

cover charge for live bands

and some of the best deep-

dish pizza in town.

www.theninesithacany.com

Castaways Located on Taughannock Blvd. Castaways has a full bar, live bands every night and free music every Friday evening. www.castawaysithaca.com

Delilah’sDelilah’s on Cayuga

offers a mu-

sic lounge and restaurant right

on the Commons with bands

every week. www.facebook.com/

delilahsoncayuga

Ithaca is...

Music

AssistAnt Accent editor sheA o’meArA shAres top

spots for live bAnds

omg!

To read a live review of the concert visit theithacan.org.

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Thursday, September 1, 2011 ACCENT The Ithacan 21

By Gillian Smith Staff Writer

Three friends from upstate New York, 19 different countries, 10,000 miles of travel and only one rule: roll up to the starting line in a car with an engine no larger than a liter.

Ithaca College alumni Chris Burt ’08 and Pete Berg ’07 joined teammate Jeff Andrews this July as The Rubber Duckies team in the Mongol Rally, an epic road trip sponsored by the UK-based League of Adventurists. They’ve gotten lost. And they’ve run out of gas at inopportune times. But they’ve also raised more than $8,000 for charity.

Berg first heard about the rally in 2007 when he was a senior at the col-lege, and said it appealed to his sense of adventure. As a student at the col-lege, Berg produced the ICTV show “The Great Race,” a show modeled after “The Amazing Race” with teams competing to reach local landmarks.

“I knew that I wasn’t ready to settle down in the real world and I wanted to do some traveling and go on some crazy adventures,” Berg said.

Any donor who contributes $25 or more to The Rubber Duckies team gets a personalized rubber duck to name whatever they choose. The team brought along 250 ducks to distribute to friends or children they met on their way to Mongolia. The teams takes a picture of the duck on location with the person who has re-ceived it and the photo is sent back to the duck’s sponsor.

“The rubber duckies ... increased our number of donations quite a bit,”

Berg said. “It’s also gotten our friends and families more invested in the trip because they’re coming along with us in a sense.”

The team began their journey from London to Ulan Bator, Mongolia, this summer in a 2004 Fiat Seicento they bought sight unseen. The Rubber Duckies are following what they call an “un-route:” there’s a starting point and an end point, but the exact way to get there and how long it takes is up to each team. GPS and electronic naviga-tional devices are not allowed.

This year marks the eighth annual Mongol Rally, with 800 people from more than 20 countries participat-ing. The Christina Noble Children’s Foundation is the sponsored charity this year. They work to help orphans and street children in Ulan Bator.

The Rubber Duckies also decided to raise money for S.O.S. Children’s Villages, an organization that helps orphaned and impoverished children by establishing orphanages.

“From the beginning, we thought we would raise money for underprivi-leged children or orphans,” Burt said. “We realized S.O.S. Villages is the charity we wanted to support because they do really amazing work and help children in over 130 countries.”

Tom Morgan, a founder of the League of Adventurists, went on an exchange program in 2002 to the Czech Republic. He bought the only car he could afford — a Fiat 126 — and embarked on a journey to Mongolia.

“The point of everything we do is to organize real adventures,” Morgan said. “You have no idea what is going

to happen or if you will come out the other end. We set the stage and hope the chaos ensues. It usually does.”

The two-month rally wasn’t all fun and games, Burt said. The team has experienced many close calls and a lot of breakdowns.

“We had to deal with corrupt po-lice in Uzbekistan and had to play dumb to get ourselves out with all sorts of bribes,” Burt said. “At one point, we got surrounded by about 20 cops at 2 a.m. and it took an hour and a half for us to get out.”

When the team was on the Pamir Highway in Tajikistan, a place where four wheel drive and ample ground clearance is a must, they learned that their Fiat Seicento was not the right car to take on that road.

“A lot of the Pamir has no electrici-ty or running water, not to mention no mechanics, so by the end, it seemed like we were fixing our car with bubble gum and popsicle sticks,” Burt said. “If it wasn’t for the helpfulness and gen-erosity of the dozens of locals who helped us keep the car moving, we would have never made it.”

On the ferry across the Caspian Sea, Berg’s backpack, with their only set of car keys in it, was stolen by the captain of the ship — an Azeri pirate — while Berg was sleeping. The team managed to get it back by giving him a bottle of cognac.

In Uzbekistan, they ran out of gas due to a fuel shortage and had to hag-gle for low-grade petrol on the black market. Their car overheated in the

desert heat from the cheap gas.Even with their mishaps, Berg

called this experience an adventure of a lifetime and wants to spend the next six months traveling to Canada and Central America after the rally.

The three adventurers are cur-rently on their way from Kyrgyzstan to the finish line. Last week, they broke down and had to be towed sev-en times. The race ends Saturday, so the team is going to be cutting it close to meet their deadline.

Bert said the best advice he re-ceived before he began the trip was to put himself out there and explore as much as he could.

“Always say yes when you get in-vited to do something like the rally,” he said. “You won’t regret it.”

Alumni traverse globe in charity road rally

From left, The Rubber Duckies team members Jeff Andrews, Chris Burt ’08 and Pete Berg ’07 prepare for their journey from London to Mongolia in the Mongol Rally. The team plans to reach the finish line this week.

CouRTesy oF PeTe BeRg

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22 The Ithacan AccenT Thursday, September 1, 2011

by lauren mateer Staff Writer

Josh Ritter follows the journey of a World War I veteran in his debut novel and shows he can change artistic mediums without losing his way with words.

Ritter’s “Bright’s Passage” tells the story of Henry Bright, a vet-eran who has to leave his West Virginia home with his newborn son to escape a forest fire. An angel Bright meets at war speaks through a horse to guide him through his travels.

For anyone who has heard Josh Ritter’s music, it is impossible to read “Bright’s Passage” without comparing it to his songs. The similarities between the novel and the music lend themselves to an enjoyable experi-ence for fans of both.

“Bright’s Passage” echoes the sparse, lyrical na-ture of Ritter’s best work, like the storytelling songs on his 2006 album “The Animal Years” or his most recent work “So Runs the World Away.” It creates an atmosphere that fits the long, arduous journey Bright must make. The content is also familiar as Ritter’s music often features angels — particularly those of questionable morality.

The novel is not laid out chronologically, but with multiple parallel timelines. Alternating chap-ters depict Bright’s time at war, the year he spent with his young wife before she died giving birth to their child and the present, where he takes orders from the angel he is not certain he can trust.

The flashbacks to Bright’s time as an American soldier in the French trenches during World War I are the highlight of the multiple narratives that weave in and around each other throughout the novel. The war-torn landscape and low morale of the soldiers create a stark, realistic background for Bright’s introduction to the angel and the begin-ning of his journey.

In the story’s weaker moments, it seems like the author tried to stretch a five-minute song into a book of about 200 pages. Some passages become heavy with unnecessary description. Luckily, these moments are rare and in most instances Ritter’s lon-ger passages describing the trek through the forest, and the anticipation of battle during the war, make

the reader feel as tired and weary as Bright himself. Despite this, the majority of “Bright’s Passage”

is a tightly written, quick read that delves deep enough into Bright’s past to create a character who is stubborn, headstrong, rational and just faithful enough to trust the angel who tells him he has a destiny to fulfill.

Even with an angel giving guidance through an animal, the focus of “Bright’s Passage” is on feel-ing, not fantasy. Bright struggles with the moral-ity of war and fitting into his old life after his re-turn from Europe. He suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder and the grief of losing his wife, but is forced to move forward in order to take care of his child.

The angel — who is never assigned a name — remains aloof throughout the story. This makes the humanity of Bright’s struggles — which are vivid and detailed unlike the angel’s mysterious

history — more realistic in contrast to the angel’s otherworldly nature.

There is nothing particularly groundbreaking about “Bright’s Passage.” It’s not the first story to feature a post-war time period, angels, talking ani-mals, journeys or moral conflict. And it certainly isn’t the first novel to be written by a folk-rock mu-sician as Ritter joins the ranks of Leonard Cohen, Bob Dylan and several others who have attempted to translate their stories from song to passage.

What makes Ritter’s novel worth reading is its emotion. The novel is a promising first look at a writer already known for his ability to tell stories in another medium, and to peruse its pages is a journey worth taking.

Visit http://joshritter.com/music to listen to song clips from Ritter’s albums “The Animal Years” and “So Runs the World Away”.

Author on track with heavenly novel

From left, singer-songwriter and author Josh Ritter and the book cover of his novel “Bright’s Passage.” This is Ritter’s first literary work after he produced six albums since his musical debut in 1999.

couRTesy oF The dial PRess

by robert rivera Staff Writer

Jay-Z and Kanye West’s col-laboration shows the rest of the hip-hop world who’s king in their new album “Watch the Throne.” The two rappers first worked together when West produced Jay-Z’s album “The Blueprint.” Jay-Z encour-aged West to pursue his own rap career. Now, with West’s in-ternational fame after the release of a series of strong albums, the two are on equal footing as they join forces to become “The Throne.”

The hard beats and fast raps in “Ni**as in Paris,” the album’s third track, make it a worthy song.

Memorable lines like “I’m liable to be go Michael/ Take your pick, Jackson, Tyson, Jordan, Game 6” move the song forward while sound clips from the movie “Blades of Glory” add a touch of comedy.

The album shows the artists’ strengths as Jay-Z’s smooth raps and West’s passionate rhymes complement each other and so-lidify their position as monarchs of the hip-hop word. All hail.

Stellar work from star duo

couRTesy oF deF Jam RecoRdings

quickies

couRTesy oF caPTuRed TRacks couRTesy oF dead conFlicT RecoRds couRTesy oF kanine RecoRds

“Red VelVet Snow BAll” Pepper rabbit Kanine records Like the cake-flavored snow cone that inspired its name, this new release isn’t a typical afternoon treat. its complex sound can’t be tied to only one genre.

“widowSpeAk” Widowspeak Captured tracks though the band moved from tacoma, Wash., to New York City, its new album still has a Wastern edge. this group relies on traditional tones and avoids the technical sounds common in the New York music scene.

“the woRld in ShAmBleS” Drive a Dead Conflict records Drive a’s second album is an edgy, socially conscious punk rock success. the new tone deeply contrasts the band’s last pop-punk release “a Loss for Words.”

thursday “Good night moon,” a musi-cal about an energetic bunny who comes to life at night, is playing at the Hangar theatre. Shows will begin at 10 a.m. and noon. tickets are $6.

friday Dancing through the Devonian is a dance party to end a summer of family fun on the Museum of the earth’s fossil freeway. Hits Girl emma from Hits 103.3fM and the Cayuga radio Group will kick off the night at 7:30 p.m. tickets are $10 for non-members at the door.

saturday Spit that! back-to-School open mic will showcase new and returning poetic talent. the event begins at 7 p.m. in iC Square and welcomes all students to hop on stage or simply sit back and enjoy. Great lake Swimmers is playing at Delilah’s on Cayuga’s. Doors open at 9 p.m. tickets are $12 in advance and $14 at the door.

sunday Cayuga lake eco-Cruise will feature guest presentations and activities designed to teach residents about envi-ronmental issues. the cruise begins at 4 p.m. and will leave from the dock at the ithaca farmer’s Market.

hotdates

Restructured light sound reflects band’s darker days

by JareD Dionne Staff Writer

The term “lovable misfit” encapsu-lates the very essence of the musical oddity that is Dom. After releasing an EP earlier this year and earning his band a coveted spot at Lollapalooza, the singularly named orphan-turned-indie kid returns with a glitzy new six-track-er. “Family of Love” may be short, but Dom oozes confi-dence and swagger.

Even after some hiring and firing within his band, Dom refuses to lose his grip on the acid trip fuzziness that permeated the “Sun Bronzed Greek Gods” EP. The collective’s latest effort,

“Family of Love,” sparkles with a pro-fessional studio polish that contrasts sharply against the amateur feel of their first attempt.

The leadoff cut “Telephone” may not reach the popularity of a certain Gaga jam, but it is one of the only songs to date that flaunts a touch-tone phone as an instrument. Dom struggles with the classic dilemma of calling a crush as he laments, “I come alive when you pick up the line/ But I die every time when we say goodbye.”

The most intriguing track on the album is the one that lends the com-pilation its name. “Family of Love” pulls back the curtain and gives the listener an exclusive peek into Dom’s enigmatic history. Though the song bounces along to grooving bass lines and a quirky synth melody, the theme

remains dramatic and tragic with Dom imagining the family he never had but seeks to attain.

Throughout “Family of Love,” Dom introduces narcissistic and demented themes that he cleverly masks with acid pop. He retains the rarely dis-covered talent of channeling negative energy into carefree bubbly goodness. Only the most intent listeners will take the time to dig beneath the candy surface to find Dom’s darker child-hood days.

AlbumReview Dom“Family of love” astralwerksrecordsOur rating: HHH

couRTesy oF asTRalweRks RecoRds

AlbumReviewJay-Z/Kayne West“Watch the throne” Def Jam recordingsOur rating:HHHH

compiled by Shea o’meara

The

bOOK Review“bright’sPassage”the Dial PressOur rating: HHH

Page 23: 09.01.2011

[ ]ticket stub

Thursday, September 1, 2011 AccenT The Ithacan 23

valid friday through thursday

our ratingsExcellent HHHH

Good HHH

Fair HH

Poor H

cinemapolis

The Commons 277–6115

the guard 7:30 p.m. and 9:35 p.m. and Weekends 2:30 p.m. and 4:35 p.m.

another earth 7:25 p.m. and 9:25 p.m. and Weekends 2:25 p.m. and 4:25 p.m.

sarah’s key 7:20 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. and Weekends 2:25 p.m. and 4:30 p.m.

the trip 7:05 p.m. and Weekends 2:05 p.m.

tree of life 9:10 p.m., except Friday and Weekends 4:10 p.m.

midnight in paris 7:15 p.m. and 9:15 p.m. and Weekends 2:15 p.m. and 4:15 p.m.

regal stadium 14Pyramid Mall 266-7960

apollo 18 2:00 p.m., 4:40 p.m., 7:40 p.m., 10:00 p.m.

shark night 3 p.m.

shark night 3-d 5:40 p.m., 8 p.m., 10:20 p.m.

the debt 1:30 p.m., 4:10 p.m., 7:10 p.m., 9:50 p.m.

colombiana 2:50 p.m., 5:30 p.m., 8:10 p.m., 10:40 p.m.

don’t be afraid of the dark 2:30 p.m., 5:20 p.m., 7:50 p.m., 10:35 p.m.

our idiot brother 2:10 p.m., 4:30 p.m., 6:50 p.m., 9:20 p.m.

conan the barbarian 3-d 1:40 p.m., 7 p.m.

fright night 3-d HH 4:25 p.m., 9:40 p.m.

one day HH 1:25 p.m., 4 p.m., 6:40 p.m., 9:10 p.m.

spy kids: all the time in the world 2:40 p.m., 5:10 p.m., 7:30 p.m.

spy kids: all the time in the world 4d H 3:20 p.m., 6:20 p.m., 9 p.m.

crazy, stupid love 7:20 p.m., 10:40 p.m.

30 minutes or less 4:20 p.m., 9:30 p.m.

cornell cinema104 Willard Straight Hall 255-3522

For more information, visit http://cinema.cornell.edu.

Remade horror film lacks lasting bitebY james hasson

STaff WriTer

Unlike new-aged depictions of television vampires who sweep wom-en off their feet and fight their natural urges, “Fright Night” tries to put the blood back in blood lust.

Based on the 1985 film of the same name, “Fright Night” is an aver-age addition to the horror/action genre with only a few standout perfor-mances and less-than-satisfactory supernatural special effects.

After investigating the disappear-ances of fellow high school students, Ed (Christopher Mintz-Plasse) fails to convince his best friend Charley (Anton Yelchin) that his neighbor Jerry (Colin Farrell) is a vampire. When Ed disappears, Charley seeks out vampire expert Peter Vincent (David Tennant) for help. Charley’s investigation turns into a man vs. vampire conflict that brings fed up girlfriend Amy (Imogen Poots) and mother Jane (Toni Collette) into the dangerous crossfire.

Director Craig Gillespie does a fair job of invoking the gore and fun of classic ’80s vampire flicks like the original “Fright Night” and “The Lost Boys.” Gillespie also shows he’s not afraid to poke fun at the popular pre-teen vampire juggernaut “Twilight” as Ed denies ever reading the books, and Jerry is obsessed with apples — a reference to the cover of the first book of the series.

Fans of “Doctor Who,” the popu-lar British science fiction television series, will be happy to hear Tennant,

one of the show’s superstars, gives a standout performance in the film. He takes his role in “Fright Night” fur-ther than the other actors by making his lines pop with comic relief.

He’s also thoroughly convincing as an occult expert and jaded magi-cian with a rock star lifestyle. In the final battle of the movie he shows backbone while dropping one-liners and pulling out a flask of liquor in the face of inevitable death.

The rest of the cast looks like zombies compared to Tennant’s lively acting. Farrell takes a dark tone when he makes a speech to Charley about the “bad people” he must pro-tect his family from, but he wouldn’t

be nearly as intimidating without the special effects that contribute to his menacing evil character. Yelchin’s performance is bland even when he confesses how badly he let Ed down.

The beginning of the film is dull and predictable, but the second act of “Fright Night” is slightly more engaging. In his first action film, di-rector Craig Gillespie creates some amusing but not over-the-top fights and chase sequences. A few details are worth savoring — such as the va-riety of weapons used by the protag-onists and Charley’s desperate plan to fight Jerry man-to-vampire — but the special effects only provide something memorable a handful of

times, like when Jerry crawls across the road with a “For Sale” sign that ends up impaling him.

3-D effects work sparingly throughout “Fright Night.” Flakes of ash from a vampire’s incinerated corpse falling like snow across the screen is one of the most impactful ef-fects. The rest of the time, the 3-D fails to enhance the audience’s experience.

While “Fright Night” is not a total flop, the attempt to revolutionize the genre never gets invited through the front door.

“Fright Night” was written by Marti Noxon and Tom Hollan and directed by Craig Gillespie.

After new neighbor Jerry (Collin Farrell) arrives in town and high school students start disappearing, vampire expert Peter Vincent (David Tennant) comes to hunt him down. The movie is a remake of the 1985 film of the same name.

CourTesy oF DreAmworks PiCTures

Vapid chemistry spoils novel plot

bY matt rosen STaff WriTer

For the two romantic leads in “One Day,” getting to know each other in 20 years proves to be difficult, but for the audience it’s nearly impossible.

In this romantic comedy, Emma Morley (Anne Hathaway) and Dexter Mayhew (Jim Sturgess) become best friends July 15, 1988, the night of their graduation from college. From there, the film, like the novel it’s based on, skips ahead to revisit the graduates on the same summer day for the next 20 years of their lives. During that time, Dexter becomes a celebrity television host and falls into heavy drug and alcohol use, while Emma struggles to find her own career.

The highly anticipated film serves more as an outline of the book as it simply skims the surface of Dexter and Emma’s lives. In adapting his own work, Nicholls isn’t quite successful at making Dexter and Emma’s romance a believable one. What was a sincere novel about friendship and the reality of youthful aspiration has been reduced to merely shallow sentiment.

In the film, Dexter’s honest attempt at getting to know Emma the night they meet makes up for his otherwise irritatingly selfish schoolboy personality. But as he grows up, he becomes as much of a wreck as he is in the novel and his new celebrity persona makes it harder to root for him. Sturgess’ charac-ter is so extremely unlikable on-screen; it’s nearly impossible to believe Emma would ever fall in love with his narcissistic attitude.

On the page, Emma is filled with awkward in-securities but is more intelligent and wittier than she appears. Hathaway, who slips in and out of a fake British accent, understands the character she’s

playing but can’t fully become Emma Morely, due to Nicholls’ thin screenplay that flies over the most important moments of her life.

The shocking, tragic twist that comes in the final act gives the story more sentiment than it deserves, mainly because it’s manipulatively foreshadowed in the first scene of the movie. Though their romance isn’t a truly plausible one, Sturgess and Hathaway share some chemistry together in their later years. A few grand moments of feeling give readers a glimpse of the smarter film it could have been.

Despite the best efforts of the cast, “One Day” trades its unusual premise for an unsatisfying ro-mance, which makes it difficult to spend even one day with the characters.

“One Day” was written by David Nicholls and directed by Lone Scherfig.

From left, emma (Anne Hathaway) and Dexter (Jim sturgess) visit each other one day every year.

CourTesy oF FoCus FeATures

FilmReview“one Day” focus features Our rating:HH

bY shea o’meara aSSiSTanT aCCenT ediTOr

Jessica Alba comes a long way from her past roles as a beach hottie as the cardigan-wearing mother to the newest installment of “Spy Kids.”

Marissa Wilson (Alba) gives up her life as a spy to be the caretaker of her new-born daughter and bickering stepchildren. But the evil Time Keeper, Danger D’Amo (Jeremy Piven), threatens to stop the clock for good, and the fate of the world falls in her family’s hands. The family quickly learns it can’t beat the bad guys alone and must move past its petty differ-ences to work as a team and save the day.

While the film may not be one for the ages, “Spy Kids: All the Time in the World in 4D” is a heartwarming family flick that brings home the importance of making time for loved ones before it’s too late.

Cheesy puns and unrealistic plot twists stop the film from having any real cinematic merit. In one action scene, Marissa fights Time Keeper’s men wearing a leather catsuit with her toddler strapped across her stomach. The film redeems itself by dealing with issues like living with a parent’s second marriage. The sentimental ending is likely to cause a tear as the group comes together and accepts their family dynamic.

“Spy Kids: All the Time in the World 4D” may not be a movie-lovers dream, but it does serve as quick reminder to wake up and live in the moment.

“Spy Kids 4” was written and directed by Robert Rodriguez.

Fourth ‘Spy Kids’ packs weak punch

FilmReview“spy Kids 4” dimension films Our rating:H

Predictable vampire plot fails to shine new light on old storyline

FilmReview“Fright night” dreamWorks Pictures Our rating:HH

Page 24: 09.01.2011

24 The Ithacan ClassIfIed Thursday, september 1, 2011

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Thursday, September 1, 2011 The Ithacan 25

Everybody has issues ...

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26 The Ithacan DIversIons Thursday, september 1, 2011

ACROSS1 Oedipus —4 Ms. Powers of old films8 Laird12 Riviera summer13 Pointed arch14 Carrot, on occasion15 Insulin producer17 Latin 101 word18 Prolonged gaze19 Fit to drink21 Sprite23 La —, Bolivia24 Accumulates (2 wds.)28 Stone-washed garment32 Razor brand33 Lawyer’s thing35 Barely visible36 Put up clapboards

39 Sports pro42 Low44 Hurricane center45 Part under the hood49 Tweeters53 Nautical position54 Plato’s mentor56 “It Walks by Night”

author57 Grades 1-1258 Have a snack59 Pairs60 Require61 Future alums

DOWN1 Gym iterations2 Oregon, to Yves3 Warrior princess4 Gourmet mushrooms5 Passport datum6 Spring up7 Early moralist8 Dirty politics9 Rein in10 Out loud11 Monsieur’s pate16 Saskatchewan tribe20 — Mahal22 Cat hair24 “Mystery!” channel25 A crowd, for Caesar?26 Type of PC screen27 Kiddie’s ammo

29 Dazzle30 Clear, as profit31 Get the drift34 Sault — Marie37 Glowing coals38 Woodland creature40 Beefalo, e.g.41 Darth’s daughter43 Merlin of the NFL45 Certainty46 — — unto itself47 First-century emperor48 Enameled metal50 AAA suggestions51 Cherished52 Former JFK arrivals55 Ernesto Guevara

Pearls Before Swine® By Stephan Pastis sudoku

crossword By United Media

Check yourself.Get your answershere in next week’sissue of The Ithacan.

Ten letters across foryour Thursday

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Page 27: 09.01.2011

Thursday, September 1, 2011 SporTS The Ithacan 27

Source ofInspiration

Senior cornerback motivated to excel with thoughts of late father

always on his mind

By harlan green-tauB assistant sports editor

Whenever senior cornerback Mike Conti is on the football field in a moment of intense stress, he closes his eyes and thinks of his father.

“Whenever there’s a big play or I’m getting nervous and over-thinking things, I close my eyes and it calms me down,” Conti said. “I feel his presence and him being there with me, almost like he’s a part of me.”

A three-year starter and captain for the Blue and Gold, Conti was named to the D3football.com East region all-star team last season after having seven pass breakups and scoring all of the Bombers’ defensive touch-downs. His nine career interceptions place him 11th in school history.

Conti’s natural athleticism comes from his father, Frank, who was a multisport athlete in high school. Frank, who passed away when Conti was 12 years old, played

a crucial role in his son’s life despite sepa-rating from Conti’s mother, Heidi, when he was toddler.

“The one thing that really drives me, especially in the sport of football, is that my dad never got to see me play one football game,” Conti said. “I only started playing football my freshman year of high school and he passed away before then, so I guess I play every game with him in the back of my mind.”

Conti, a native of Branford, Conn., starred on the Daniel Hand High School football team his junior and senior seasons though he never previously played a varsity sport. Originally a linebacker, he switched to cornerback after the coaches took notice of his speed. Conti took to the position nat-urally and found success from the get-go. In three scrimmages prior to his junior season Conti recorded nine interceptions.

“The coaches wanted to ease me into the position but after those games they knew

I was ready to go and I started every game my junior and senior year,” he said.

Conti led his team to the 2007 Connecticut Class MM State Championship game and an un-defeated regular season. He had an interception return and a receiv-ing touchdown in the game, but sprained his ankle in the second half and was unable to play the rest of the game. Hand would go on to blow a 14-point lead and fall to New Canaan High School 34-30 without Conti’s

help. Writers who covered the game still voted Conti the championship game’s Most Valuable Player.

While Conti’s life on the football field has been very successful, he will always play the game he loves with a heavy heart.

Conti’s life was permanently altered in the spring of 2003 when Frank, a promi-nent restaurateur and small business own-er, went into the hospital with a blood clot in his leg. Conti was called out of class to go see his father in the hospital before he went into surgery to get the clot removed.

“He seemed pretty normal when we went to see him,” Conti said. “The surgery was the next day, so me and my mom went to get dinner. I didn’t know it then, but it was the last time I would see him.”

The surgery successfully removed the clot and doctors said Frank should have been able to make a full recovery in about a week. Frank did not respond to the medi-cations he was given, however, because of cirrhosis of the liver, a condition he devel-oped from alcohol abuse earlier in life.

“My uncle was going to the hospital every day to see my dad and I didn’t want to go,” Conti said. “Looking back, I think it was a good thing because the memories I have of my dad are all good, not of him hooked up to machines in the hospital.”

Frank passed away a week after the sur-gery. Conti described the two weeks of his father’s time in the hospital and his even-tual death as the toughest time of his life.

“The week he passed my mom took me to a psychiatrist be-cause she didn’t know how to tell me he wasn’t going to make it,” Conti said. “It was like one of those moments in a movie where every-thing is so surreal. I was in complete denial at that point.”

It wasn’t until his father’s funeral a week later that Conti received advice he would carry with him the rest of his life. The priest at his father’s funeral

confided in Conti

that he too had lost a parent at a young age. “He told me that whenever you want to

be with him or feel his presence, just close your eyes and he’ll be with you,” he said.

Conti described his dad as a hard worker, a quality Head Coach Mike Welch said he sees in him as well.

“Mike is a blue-collar type of person in the sense that he works overtime,” Welch said. “Not just on the field, but in the weight room and film room as well.”

Mike’s mother Heidi Shepard said Frank not only gave his son his athletic ability, but also made sure Mike took more away from sports than just the competitive mind-set.

“He got a lot from his dad in terms of sports themes and what you can get out of a competitive environment and apply it to the rest of your life,” she said.

When Mike Conti steps onto a football field his actions are fluid and natural, like he was born to play cornerback.

No play sums up Conti’s athletic abil-ity and sense of awareness better than a play in last year’s regular season opener against St. Lawrence University. With the game tied 3-3 late in the first half and St. Lawrence driving in Bomber territory, Conti seamlessly stepped in front of a pass from St. Lawrence then-junior quar-terback Andy Spadoni and returned it 66 yards for the Bombers’ first touchdown of the 2010 season.

Though he never got to see that play, or any others, Frank is still with his son every time he steps on the gridiron. Mike has a tattoo of his father on the left side of his chest to commemorate his father’s memory.

Shepard said while she’s not a fan of tattoos she fully understood why Mike wanted to get it.

“It meant a lot to him to have it,” she said. “So I had to support his decision.”

Conti, who enters his fourth year on varsity and was voted one of five captains by his teammates, said he knows how lucky he is to have the opportunities he has been presented with.

“[My father’s death] really put a lot of things into perspective,” he said. “I hate losing more than most people, but when you look back at the end of the day and re-alize how fortunate you are to go to a great school, live a great life, be healthy and play the sport of college football — there’s not a ton of people that can say that.”

Senior cornerback and defensive captain Mike Conti shows his tattoo of his late father, Frank Conti, on the left side of his chest. Frank died of liver failure when Mike was 12 years old.MIChelle boulé/the IthaCan

above: Conti catches passes Friday on lower allen Field. he had six interceptions last year.

MIChelle boulé/the IthaCan

Right: From left, heidi Shepard poses with son Mike Conti and husband Frank Conti in Jan. 1993 at their home in branford, Conn.

CouRteSy oF heIdI ShepaRd

Page 28: 09.01.2011

28 The Ithacan SporTS Thursday, September 1, 2011

harlan green-taub

crunch time

harlan green-taub is a senior televison-radio major. Contact him at [email protected].

Saturday night in an NFL pre-season game between the Houston Texans and San Francisco 49ers, reigning rushing champion Arian Foster injured his left hamstring. It’s the second time during this preseason Foster injured the same hamstring, setting off panic attacks among owners of fantasy football teams who had drafted the player with their top picks.

Foster, who came out of virtu-ally nowhere last year to become one of the breakthrough players of the season, sent out this thought-provoking tweet:

“4 those sincerely concerned, I’m doing ok & plan 2 B back by opening day. 4 those worried abt your fantasy team, u ppl are sick.”

Is it now possible sports fans are now at a point where they care more about their fantasy teams than the real thing?

Tennessee Titans running back Chris Johnson, the number one pick in most fantasy drafts last seasons, is watching his draft stock plummet from a contract dispute. Most fantasy owners are hoping his holdout continues because one team in every fantasy league certainly spent their first-round draft pick on Johnson (I was one of them).

I constantly find myself checking to make sure I’m not rooting against my favorite teams in favor of one player on my fantasy team. We as “owners” of fantasy teams sometimes forget that these are real people who we are counting on to produce results. When we secretly hope a player gets injured so our team can hold on to a win, we come off looking like terrible people with no regard for the well-being of another human.

A few years ago, former MLB first baseman Doug Mientkie-wicz recalled being asked by fans to hit more home runs so their teams would be more successful. Mientkiewicz, who retired in 2009 with 66 home runs in 12 seasons, responded by telling the fans that they probably owned the wrong first baseman.

With some people spending upwards of $1,000 to join leagues with cash prizes topping out at more than $10,000, it’s only natural for those involved to care an inor-dinate amount about players who would have flown under the radar 10 years ago.

Before fantasy sports, those who are now serious about fantasy football would have had no care in the world about who a particular team’s third-string wide receiver was. Now, many “owners” can name several teams’ back-up players, though they’ve never seem them play.

The point of competition has been lost in fantasy sports. No longer do we care if a particular team wins or loses, so long as our fantasy team is winning.

From fantasy comes reality

Coordinator brings energy to defenseBy harlan green-tauB

AssistAnt sports editor

Adjusting to new schemes, plays and forma-tions makes coaching changes in football hard to adapt to. Luckily for new Defensive Coordinator Mark McDonough ’02, he’s already familiar with his surroundings.

McDonough, a starting linebacker for the Bombers for three seasons from 2000 to 2002, spent six seasons as the linebacker’s coach at Division I-AA College of the Holy Cross and two seasons at Springfield College in the same position. Now he’s back on South Hill.

McDonough, who played under current Head Coach Mike Welch, said coming back to Ithaca College has been a surreal experience.

“It’s a great feeling to be back and it’s the first time I’ve been here for an extended period of time since I graduated,” McDonough said. “It’s a little different being on the coaching side of things rather than playing, but it’s been a good experience working with the players and going through training camp.”

McDonough said playing for Welch and now having the opportunity to work alongside him has made McDonough appreciate Welch that much more.

“Coach Welch is a wealth of knowledge and has been a wonderful resource in the short time that I’ve been here,” McDonough said. “I can’t say enough positive things about what he’s done for me already — and of course giving me the opportunity to come back and work for him has been wonderful.”

McDonough is replacing Mark Ross and Pete Mayer. Ross served as the Bombers defensive coordinator for the last four seasons and was part of the staff when McDonough graduated. Mayer served as the defensive backs’ coach. Ross left the Blue and Gold to become the first head coach at Misericordia College in Dallas, Pa.

McDonough said Ross left a strong defense and not much change is needed.

“I have a tremendous amount of respect for Coach Ross and Coach Mayer,” McDonough said. “Both of them did a fantastic job with the defense while they were here and I just want to put the players in the best position possible to

take advantage of their skill set.”Senior linebacker Eric Toporoff, last year’s

team-leading tackler, said McDonough’s enthusi-asm and energy in practice has the players excited for the season.

“Coach Mac knows his stuff and is highly mo-tivated,” Toporoff said. “He brings that to the table every practice and it has the guys ready to go.”

Junior free safety Josh Liemer said the defense has been able to get to the quarterback quicker in

training camp under McDonough. “He has us playing with a lot more energy,”

Liemer said. “We’re putting a lot more pressure on the quarterback and getting after him every play.”

Liemer said with the knowledge that the defen-sive front is new, there is some added pressure on the veterans in the secondary to step up.

“We’ve all played in games before so we do know what to expect,” Liemer said. “We know when it counts, though, we’ll be able to make the plays.”

From left, new Defensive Coordinator Mark McDonough ’02 works with junior linebackers Pete Haines and Zach Matuszak during practice last Thursday. McDonough played three seasons for the Bombers.

MiCHelle Boulé/THe iTHaCaN

Goalies compete in heated battle for starting role By andrew kristy

stAff writer

The men’s soccer season will kick off 2011 with a new face standing be-tween the pipes. But just whose face that will be remains undetermined.

With last year’s starter and All-Empire 8 honorable-mention team member Justin Parlapiano graduated, the South Hill squad is still searching for a replacement.

Head Coach Andy Byrne said the competition for the starting spot has been narrowed down to senior Evan Kirshner and sopho-more Jack Van Adelsberg. Byrne said each athlete brings a different method to the position.

“Jack’s a little bit more of a phys-ical presence in the goal,” Byrne said. “Evan is a very quick guy, so their style of goalkeeping is a little bit different.”

Kirshner has more collegiate experience than his counterpart. Appearing in nine total games over his three-year career, Kirshner has posted a 3–3–1 record and has made 32 total saves.

Kirshner said his experience is a crucial ingredient to the blend he brings to the field.

“It’s kind of like the quarter-back of the field — you’re direct-ing everyone where to go,” he said. “So I definitely think I bring leadership to that position — and

just going through the system year after year.”

Though Van Adelsberg might not have the benefit of time on his side, he stands four inches taller than Kirshner.

Kirshner said the competition has not brewed up any negative personal feelings.

“We go up to the field every day and we know we’re battling each other,” he said. “It’s a very heated

battle, but there’s no hard feelings.”Van Adelsberg said he wanted

to see Kirshner do well, but kept the situation in perspective.

“It’s tough because you love that guy next to you and want to see them do just as well as you do,” Van Adelsberg said. “But obviously at the end of the day you want to play.”

A goalie is one of the most im-portant positions on the soccer pitch and finding the right man will be crucial for the Bombers’ success.

Kirshner said having the team’s trust was the most important factor in earning the starting job.

“That’s the difference between a normal goalie who’ll let in one of those goals and a fantastic goalie who’ll take that ball out of the upper 90 and steal the game for their team,” he said.

Kirshner said the position is demanding because of the small window of opportunity to make impact plays.

“During a game we might only save one or two shots, but it’s whether we can come up big with those shots,” he said.

Byrne said the team is looking for the goalie that will maintain stability in the backfield.

“The one that will have control of the box and be a leader back there is one of the things we are looking for,” he said.

Senior goalie evan Kirshner dives for the ball during practice Monday on upper Terrace Field. Kirshner made 10 saves in three games last season.

KeviN CaMPBell/THe iTHaCaN

stat checkthe Bombers defense gave up an average of 16 points per game last season.

Page 29: 09.01.2011

Thursday, September 1, 2011 SporTS The Ithacan 29

Bombers setting up for successful season

From left, junior hitter Missy Weil sets the ball to senior outside hitter Jessica Hoeffner for the kill during practice Friday in Ben Light Gymnasium. Weil joins the team following two seasons playing at Corning Community College.

MiCHeLLe BouLé/THe iTHaCan

By Nate Bickell staff writer

Behind every successful kill is a perfectly placed set that makes it all possible, and the volleyball team realizes that now more than ever.

With sophomore Sydney Folk, last year’s team leader in assists, leaving the team to focus on playing for the softball team, the setting duties will fall to junior Marissa Woodcome and junior transfer Missy Weil.

Senior outside hitter Liz Previte said the team is disappointed los-ing Folk, but understands her deci-sion to leave. Previte said Folk was a strong setter because she could communicate well with her in pres-sure situations on the court.

Woodcome shared setting duties with Folk last year and tallied 507 last season. Weil, a transfer from Corning Community College, will be setting for the first time since high school after playing as a hitter for the Red Barons.

Previte said the setter needs to know who the most effective hitter is in executing certain plays.

“A setter knows when you’re hot on one specific hit one day and she’ll keep feeding you the ball,” she said. “The setter has to decide who’s hot and also what set is the best for the hitter.”

The setters and hitters work together every day in practice and the setters learn the exact set that each hitter prefers. For example,

Previte prefers her sets to be on the far right side of the court and five feet off the net.

The job of the setter may seem simple at first: Take every second ball of the point. But Woodcome said the duties of the setter are among the most complex on the court.

“We have to know all of the plays. We have to know each individual hit-ter and what their tendencies are,” she said. “We have to know the other side of the court, like who are the weakest blockers and who to set on our side so we can take advantage of the weaker blockers.”

A common play that Woodcome calls to the team is a shoot and a slide. She sends the hitters in differ-ent directions to confuse and split up the opponents’ blockers. Woodcome then needs to decide which hitter to set the ball to.

Since the setter calls and runs the offense, Weil said, the position is often compared to the quarterback of a football team.

“You’ve got to find out what each player is the best at, figure out a play and then run it,” she said.

Head Coach Janet Donovan said diligence and initiative were essential traits for a setter.

“She works harder than every-body else on the team, she is a really good leader, a good motivator and stays really positive,” she said.

Woodcome said setters and hitters need to be able to com-

municate what went wrong after a missed shot.

“It’s really situational to know whose fault it was because it could be a perfect set and the hitter didn’t get there,” she said.

Previte, who had 34 assists last

season, said she and Woodcome have developed effective communi-cation skills after playing with each other for two seasons.

“Marissa is very levelheaded and she takes criticism, but I know not to yell at Marissa because she has to be

thinking about so much,” Previte said. Woodcome said it all boils down

to trust between setters and hitters. “The setter has to have the con-

fidence that the hitter is going to put them where they know they can succeed,” she said.

raCHeL orLoW/THe iTHaCanThe Ithacan online | theithacan.org/sports

Look online for game stories from these sports:TODAY• 4 p.m. Field hockey vs. SUNY-Cortland at

Higgins Stadium

TOMORROW• 4 p.m./6 p.m. Volleyball at Penn State Behrend and

Skidmore College in Cortland, N.Y.• 8 p.m. Men’s soccer at Ramapo College of New Jersey in

Glassboro, N.J.

SATURDAY•11: 15 a.m. Men’s and women’s cross country at

Jannette Bonrouhi-Zakaim Memorial Alumni Run on Ithaca College Cross Country Course

• Noon/2 p.m./4 p.m. Volleyball at TBA in Cortland, N.Y.•1 p.m. Football vs. SUNY-Brockport at

Butterfield Stadium • 2:30 p.m. Women’s soccer at The College of New Jersey

in Elizabethtown, Pa.• 7 p.m. Men’s soccer at Rowan University in Glassboro, N.J.

SUNDAY• Noon Women’s soccer at Elizabethtown College in

Elizabethtown, Pa.

WEDNESDAY• 4 p.m. Women’s tennis vs. Elmira College at Ithaca

College Tennis Courts• 4 p.m. Women’s soccer vs. Marywood University at

Carp Wood Field

Bold = Home game

Page 30: 09.01.2011

30 The Ithacan Thursday, September 1, 2011

Page 31: 09.01.2011

[the buzzer]thursday, September 1, 2011 the Ithacan 31

Being upstairs is for the birds. I like to be on the sidelines and be able to grab a kid and tell him certain things.

Penn State football coach Joe Paterno on coaching from the side-lines rather than the press box this year.

they saidit

Carolina Panthers tight end Jeremy Shockey has been a controversial athlete his entire professional career. From throwing a cup of ice into the stands that hit a child to a brawl with teammate Brandon Short during his first training camp dinner with the New York Giants, it seems like he has gotten nothing but negative press. But this past week, Shockey made headlines for a heroic act. Shockey saved teammate Ben Hartsock’s life when Hartsock was choking on a piece of pork tenderloin dur-ing the Panthers’ lunch Monday. According to Hartsock’s agent Mike McCartney, Hartsock tried to drink water to clear his throat at first. When that didn’t work, another Panthers player tried to perform the Heimlich maneuver on Hartsock, but was unsuccessful. At this moment, Shockey gave Hartsock a heavy pat on the back that did the trick. Shockey signed with the Panthers in March after the New Orleans Saints cut him at the end of last season. He and Hart-sock have been competing for the starting spot at tight end dur-ing the preseason, so one has to wonder what would have happened had Shockey not intervened.

-Kevin McCall

Weird news from the wide world of sportsthe foul line

Catching some airStar Rounds, 13, of Groton, N.Y., ollies onto a ramp Friday in the skate park at Titus Flats-Wood Street Park on South Meadow St. Built in 1994, the park has a basketball court, handball court, four softball fields and a playground.

keviN caMPBell/The iThacaN

bombers to watchDavid GearySeniorMen’s Cross CountryGeary had the Bombers’ second-best time in the 6,000-meter run last season at Cortland’s Jack Daniels Invitational. His season-best time in the 8,000-meter run came at the Empire 8 conference championships in Saratoga Springs, N.Y.

One of the key story lines coming into this weekend is the quar-terback battle between junior Jason Hendel, junior Pat Griffin, and sophomore Phil Neumann. In an interview with ESPN 1160 on Monday, Head Coach Mike Welch said Neumann would be at the top of the depth chart. Welch noted Neumann is not only sound fundamentally, but also understands the team’s offense and makes good decisions. Ultimately it comes down to this: Is the move to Neumann only to gain experience against a weaker SUNY-Brockport team, or will Neumann start at quarterback for the next three years?

Julia ConroyJuniorField Hockey

Collin SchuckJuniorPlay-By-Play

Gavin Cote SeniorPlay-By-Play

The key for the football team in its game against SUNY-Brock-port will be defensive play. Containing the ground attack from senior running back and former Bomber Alex Hendrickson, Brockport’s leading rusher last season, will be imperative for a Bombers victory. With safeties Andy Lonsky and David Ahonen graduated, there is some uncertainty in the secondary. Senior cornerbacks Spencer White and Mike Conti will provide veteran leadership that will be crucial for the Bombers in the game, but the greatest question lies at the nose tackle position. Look for freshman defensive tackle Josh Skowronski to have an immediate impact as the successor to Andrew Haim ’11.

Conroy was second on the South Hill squad in goals (3), assists (3) and points (9) last season. She had a goal and an assist in a 2-1 win against Empire 8 rival Utica College on Oct. 2.

by the numbers 34The number of wins senior goalie Evan Kirshner has in his career with the Bombers. See story on page 28.

The number of assists senior middle blocker Liz Previte had for the volleyball team last season. See story on page 29.

3

Footballforecast

Defense will be key for the Bombers against SUNY-Brockport this weekend

Page 32: 09.01.2011

32 The Ithacan ThIs I see Thursday, september 1, 2011

Rachel ORlOw AssistAnt Photo Editor

The freshman class was welcomed to campus Sunday night during the annual E Komo Mai event

sponsored by IC After Dark.

Senior Willie Sleight attempts to slow down opponent and fellow IC After Dark volunteer senior Eric Wysocki, left, in an inflatable obstacle course race Sunday at E Komo Mai.

From left, freshman Henry Sengle gets a bracelet fitted by freshman Karly Redpath. E Komo Mai offered activities from craft tables to raffles for dorm items and gift cards.

From left, freshmen Kendall Griffin and Aviva Berkowitz break it down on the dance floor. The event aims to help freshmen meet new people and have safe late-night fun.

The Freshmen get their groove on at E Komo Mai, an annual welcome event sponsored by First-Year Experience and IC After Dark. This was the first year it was held in Emerson Suites.

on the blocknew kids

Check out an audio slideshow of the welcome event at theithacan.org.