Casual elegance' at Phila Fusion

Posted by Erin Dillon

Though all amazingly delicious in distinct ways, not all Asian foods are created equal. Why go to a restaurant that serves just one cuisine when you can have five?

Phila Fusion offers Chinese, Korean, Japanese, Thai and Vietnamese dishes. The diligence and expertise of the chefs was made clear to me after enjoying a Sunday night dinner with my dad.

Phila Fusion's website describes its dining experience as "casual elegant," and it was exactly that. The space has a sophisticated appeal without the tension of an exceedingly ritzy venue. Bold yet simple touches create a modern vibe (as if the word "fusion" was not enough).

The restaurant was pleasantly full at peak dinner time, but not too noisy or chaotic. We were seated immediately by possibly the most cheerful waitress I have ever encountered. In fact, had it not been for the wait staff's general glee, their over-attentiveness and frequent one centimeter water refills may have been annoying. I was very happy with the service.

The menu is long to accommodate such a diverse array of food. Everything displayed looked delectable.

The menu includes many vegetarian options, in addition to basically any Asian dish that your heart desires. Be prepared to make a tough decision.

To start, I had a simple green salad with peanut dressing. Even this run-of-the-mill appetizer was exceptionally yummy; I appreciated the contrast between the bright, cold vegetables and the warm peanut sauce.

For an entrée I ordered Mixed-Vegetable Panang Curry with brown rice. It came as a medley of peas, basil leaves, string beans, celery, carrots, zucchini, yellow squash and fried tofu in a red curry sauce.

The dish was quite good; every element was cooked correctly and it had a perfect vegetable to sauce to rice ratio. However, I was disappointed with its lack of a defining flavor. A curry should not be vague.

Phila Fusion is a bit more expensive than its neighboring restaurant, Sushi Thai. My meal came to about $20. For a restaurant that made me feel so classy and cultured, I would say $20 is a steal.

Good to know: Phila Fusion now has delivers within three miles. Just add an extra $2 delivery fee to your order.

Phila Fusion is a restaurant I want to visit again. The food is whimsical and tasty. The unique atmosphere and service are definitely of Saratoga's best. I urge you to check this place out.

Arguing friends and awkward 'hook ups': What Would C. Do? Advice from an Anonymous Friend

Posted by C.

Let's prepare ourselves for the upcoming weeks — there is about to be a lot of work, a lot of frustration and a lot of fun.

Fun Day is approaching and whether you have questions about your outfit choice or your flirt-buddy for the day, I will be here to address any last minute conundrums.

Dear C.,

My boyfriend has a friend that I don't really get along with. He has made direct, rude comments to me and does not make an effort to get to want to know me. What do you suggest I do? I really want to have a better relationship with his friends.

—Wantingtobefriends

Dear Wantingtobefriends,

Talk to the friend. Communicate with the friend without your boyfriend's knowledge to save him from the stress of a confrontation.

However, when you do talk to him there are a few guidelines:

1. Do not tell your boyfriend. Your boyfriend does not want to get involved with something with which he is already uncomfortable. I am sure he is aware of the tension and probably feels guilty.

2. Do not blame him for having a problem with you; make it about your boyfriend's happiness. If you come on aggressively about why he has an issue with you, he will most likely get angrier and nothing will be solved. Instead, calmly approach him to resolve things for the sake of your boyfriend.

3. Be honest. Maybe you guys just do not see eye-to-eye on issues, and he unintentionally upsets you. Also, do not mistake his rudeness for possible flirting. Remember back in middle school when boys would be mean as a sign of affection?

Well, you cannot expect things to change too easily — boys will be boys.

Dear C.,

What are the rules for using the Skidmore Hookup site? Someone I am interested in has added me and I added her back so she knows we have a match.

When I talk to her, should I actually mention that, or just ask her out while leaving that unspoken? It is great to know that she is interested, but I feel strange bringing up that she indicated that through the Internet. Should I say anything?

—Cyber Seduction

Dear Cyber Seduction,

The Skidmore Hookup site is an awesome idea for hooking up with your next booty call and maybe even your next girlfriend. I, too, have had weird thoughts about the site — to list or not to list.

I have yet to actually fill it out because of this dilemma. I hate to say this, but a party situation is probably the best and easiest way to pin her down.

If you do not roll in the same friend group, search for her on Fun Day. You know she will be there and will probably be feeling good, so why not say a friendly hello? Approach her like you would any other girl you are interested in and not like some bionic seductress.

It is an awkward situation for her as well, but making the first move shows you have confidence, a huge turn-on.

Mind you, the hookup site is for hook ups and not marriage, like Match.com. It is supposed to be fun.

Plus, with the added tension and conquest, the hookup has potential to be more passionate than expected. I might go make my list now.

Stars and Hearts, C.

My aim is to advise, not to direct. The real question is what will you do? E-mail me at SkidWWCD@gmail.com with questions.

Privacy is guaranteed. Advice can remain unpublished upon request.

Updike uproots the American lifestyle: Stranger than Fiction

Posted by Hunter Prichard

There is an imaginative thrill about a person throwing up his hands, uprooting everything and taking an adventure.

Jack Kerouac and his fellow Beats exhibited this in his road novels. Hunter S. Thompson's Gonzo journalism took him on trips with his attorney to Vegas and with the Hells Angels.

Many authors also seem to have trouble with stability and marriage.

Sherwood Anderson left his wife and young children to go after the artist's life, while John Cheever struggled with alcoholism and eventually reinvented his wife as a narcissistic nuisance to his psychiatrist. Even Charles Dickens kicked his wife out of his home because he thought that she was not accepting his love.

However, writers who leave their families behind or treat them poorly are usually forgiven by the public; they are under the influence of a "greater art."

In the 1960 novel, "Rabbit, Run," author John Updike attempts to destroy this myth by creating a "family-man" who leaves his wife and child to live out his life. He ends up only discovering the harm behind his intentions.

The novel concerns the iconic Henry "Rabbit" Angstrom, a worker in a small Pennsylvania town with an alcoholic wife, Janice, and a young son, Nelson.

Rabbit, a tall man with an odd figure and countenance like that of a bunny, was once a great high school basketball player.

In the opening scenes, Rabbit tells his wife he is going out to get cigarettes. He proceeds to get into his car and start driving. He heads to West Virginia, but then turns around and settles back in town.

Eventually, he shacks up with a part-time prostitute that he is introduced to by his former basketball coach.

Rabbit is a young man — only 27 or 28 — who rejects authority, control, leadership and advice. He does not know exactly what he wants and continually shows signs of immaturity.

Back in town, where he lives a few miles away from his wife and son, Rabbit is hated by most people. Janice's parents are the wealthy owners of a car dealership and the hot shots of the area. They ask the local minister, Jack Eccles, for help.

He attempts to take Rabbit under his wing by confiding in him, questioning him on what he wants in life and offering him a psychiatric and spiritual outlet in the form of Tuesday golf games.

That is one half of the story: Rabbit living in a town in which nearly everyone either avoids him or smothers him with attention and questions about why he left his wife.

He is told at one point, "If you have the guts to be yourself, other people'll pay your price."

This quote sent a shudder through my body while I was reading. I immediately over-analyzed every important decision that I have made, fearing I may have screwed someone over in the process.

The second part of the story concerns his relationship with his new girlfriend, Ruth. Ruth is an unattractive, overweight, unappealing person who serves as a conscience for him.

As his relationship with Ruth tightens and strengthens, he is once again drawn to the clear sky of solitude.

The last third of the book is very eventful. The plot move quickly, making it hard to talk about without giving everything away. Things do not end happily for Rabbit, but for reasons that one would not expect.

Updike followed "Rabbit, Run" with four novels and novella that chronicles the life of Rabbit.

I have only read the first novel. If the next four are anything like the original, Updike has a lot to say on the American lifestyle.

Hunter Prichard is an English major from Portland, Maine or ‘Vacationland.'

The taste of spring and fresh cookies: A Sprinkle in Time

Posted by Katie Lane

Last week I wrote about sunflower cupcakes out of a sense of desperation and need for sun, warmth, summer and relaxation.

Well, one out of four is not so bad. (Hint: it is not summer, I am not relaxed and it is barely sunny … ) But I am not complaining. I walked outside in a T-shirt without getting frostbite. I am a happy camper.

This article is not going to showcase some fancy bread technique or show off an elaborate cake design. It is just about cookies. Sometimes, you just need to step back from all the fancy-pants recipes and wild kitchen adventures and whip up a batch up of regular, old cookies.

Do not worry if they are perfectly round, and definitely do not bother to measure the chocolate chips. These are lunchbox cookies. Cookie jar cookies. The kind that you can gobble up without having to stop and admire.

So this weekend I opened my cupboard, pulled out a bag of chocolate chips, a box of raisins and a jar of peanut butter, and I just made cookies.

These cookies totally lived up to my expectations. They were sturdy, snack-sized and delicious. They tasted great with that just-out-of-the-oven warmth, but were still great the next day. They were a nice post-dinner treat and the perfect chaser to a lunchtime PBJ.

A versatile, simple, sturdy cookie. What else could a girl ask for? (Besides summer, sun and relaxation, that is…)

For more adventures in the kitchen, check out www.asprinkleintime.wordpress.com.


Chocolate Chip Raisin Peanut Butter Cookies

Ingredients:

½ cup butter

½ cup sugar

½ cup brown sugar

1 egg

1 teaspoon vanilla

¾ cup peanut butter

1 cup flour

1 teaspoon baking powder

A Pinch of salt

½ cup chocolate chips

½ cup raisins

Preparation:

Preheat oven to 375ºF (175ºC).

Line a cookie sheet or two with parchment.

Cream butter and sugars until creamy, then add egg and vanilla and beat until smooth.

Add peanut butter and continue to beat until combined.

Add flour, baking powder and salt and stir to combine.

Add chips and raisins and stir again.

Drop small spoonfuls of dough onto parchment

Bake 12 minutes or until just golden.

 This recipe is adapted from canarygirl.com

 

Students Spread Autism Awareness

Posted by Julia Leef

In conjunction with April - Autism Awareness month - this week the college featured many events hosted by Professor of Psychology Rachel Mann-Rosan's PS-212B Developmental Disabilities and Autism class. These events ranged from panels of students speaking about their experiences in working or living with people with special needs to guests from the non-profit organizations Saratoga Bridges and ASPIRe NY presenting at information sessions to help raise awareness about autism.

The series of events started on Tuesday, April 5 with a showing of the film, The Horse Boy. On Monday, April 11, a panel of students spoke about their experiences in working with children with special needs. The majority of the panel previously worked with children on the autistic spectrum at a special needs summer camp. One helped a student with Aspergers Syndrome in theater, and another, Elizabeth Karp '11, did research at UCLA with a focus on people affected by autism.

Nearly all of the college students said they just "fell into it" through the suggestions of family or friends and have enjoyed their time working personally with autistic children. They taught the children how to play with one another and assisted them in social situations, which many special needs children find difficult or awkward.

Each student on the panel emphasized the uniqueness of each individual child, saying that they were simply normal children who had trouble expressing themselves in a way that others could understand. One student described a boy who had an exceptional memory, and had memorized the floor plans of every mall in the area where he lived. For the students, their experiences provided lessons in patience, cooperation, and in dealing with difficult situations. They recommended that other students participate in special needs summer camps and other opportunities in working with children on the autism spectrum.

The Drastic Measures, the college's co-ed charity a cappella group, performed briefly and talked about their experience in working with and donating money to ASPIRe NY, which provides recreational activities for teens and young adults on the autism spectrum in the greater Saratoga County and Capital District Region.

Tuesday, April 12, featured three guests from Saratoga Bridges who spoke about various topics relating to those with autism. Beth Mormando, speech and language pathologist, discussed effective ways to communicate with people on the autism spectrum. Cassandra Estey, behavior specialist, talked about positive behavior supports and some disorders of the autism spectrum. At the end of the presentation, Wendy Ashe, certified occupational therapy assistant, gathered the audience together to simulate what it felt like to be autistic by having them follow a series of rapid instructions while overloading their senses with noise and flashing lights. Several people could not go through with the exercise, and one students even said that he thought he was going to throw up.

Two events occurred on Wednesday, April 13, that involved stories from parents of children on the autistic spectrum and speakers from ASPIRe. In the latter, Julie Marks, one of the co-founders of the organization, spoke about how people normally perceive those with Asperger's Syndrome and other forms of autism, and the importance of people accepting that they are autistic.

Melanie Hecker, a three-year member of ASPIRe who was diagnosed with Asperger's at a young age and is now 17 and about to enter into college, spoke about her experience with the syndrome. She talked about many issues that people diagnosed with Asperger's have, such as difficulties with social interactions, reading emotions, and coping with sensory overload. Melanie also emphasized that such issues differ from case to case. "When you've met one person with Asperger's, you've met one person with Asperger's," she said.

Melanie added that she has enjoyed her time with ASPIRe, saying that she is able to interact with people in a way that she was not always able to in school. "I have people who I can be close to," she said, "and I don't have to question whether they're my friends or not."

Marks concluded the meeting by suggesting that students who wished to become more involved could volunteer as peer mentors in the program. She and her partner Deborah Garrelts can be contacted at info@aspireny.org.

In the morning on Thursday, April 14, students of Mann-Rosan's PS 212B class presented posters on autism and developmental disabilities in the Case Center, and in the evening Paul A. H. Partridge, Ph.D., who practices psychology in Schenectady, NY, gave a review of the recent research on the epidemiology of Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD), as well as some of the proposed changes to the ASD diagnoses to the next diagnostic manual.

Mann-Rosan, who had hosted an Autism Awareness week last year with her class, said that on average there were about 25-30 people at each event, and this year was the same, if not better. Students tell her that they find the events interesting and relevant, which is not surprising considering most of these students, according to Mann-Rosan, know someone on the autism spectrum who is regularly involved in their lives. "It seems like it's an issue that is touching the lives of the Skidmore community," she said. "I felt like it was a mechanism for helping the students to feel as if they are getting involved and becoming more intimately involved in the subject."

Last year, Mann-Rosan was invited to give a talk on autism at a local conference with childcare providers. Prior to coming to Skidmore, she worked as a supervising psychologist at Saratoga Bridges, where she was able to reach out to the community and spread awareness about her work. "I have devoted my career to this," she said, "and my hope is that it will inspire young people to want to get involved in their own way."

In addition to contacting the aforementioned organizations, students may also visit the parent-run organization Upstate NY Autism Awareness's website (www.upstatenyautism.org) or contact families who are looking for students to work with their children one-on-one. Senator Roy McDonald, who spoke at the Autism Awareness week last year, may also be contacted for information on the legislative side of these issues.

"I encourage students to be open to people who are different," she said. "To be open to experiences like volunteering . . . and to get involved."

Philip Roth's alter-ego finds his 'happily ever after': Stranger than Fiction

Posted by Hunter Prichard

The "Zuckerman books" are a series of three novels and a novella written by Philip Roth. Roth has been a force in American literature for the past 40 or 50 years; he has written books that scare critics away and trick the intellectual fools on the Pulitzer and National Book Award committees into giving him honors.

Nathan Zuckerman, the arrogant and insecure narrator, is Roth's alter-ego. Both are perverse, unromantic, famous, Jewish and from New Jersey. When Roth was in his thirties, he wrote a book sparked "Portnoy's Complaint." The book caused controversy and vilified Roth as a "self-hating Jew."

The book sold a lot of copies and turned him into an outlaw of American letters.

Zuckerman writes a book titled, "Carnovsky" — the same in spirit and in content as "Portnoy's Complaint" — that gave some assurance into Roth's private life.

"The Anatomy Lesson", written in 1983, is the third novel in the series. Zuckerman is in his forties and is well-known around the world as an important author. He is a survivor of three marriages, and the divorces are all considerably his fault. His parents are dead and his brother is estranged. Suddenly, he is overcome with physical pain that leaves him stationary and unable to type.

The physical impediment comes so suddenly that no diagnosis can be made. Zuckerman comes to the conclusion that it is God's sign to stop writing.

Zuckerman is a lonely man with an ear for words and a high-voltage sex drive. He does not have friends, his ex-wives hate him and he has no family. Though he has four women who come to take care of him, he is eager to reinvent his life.

On a whim, he decides to reenter the University of Chicago as a pre-med student. He decides to quit writing to become a doctor to follow his literary heroes who found themselves in ruts, mentioning Kafka, who became a waiter in a café, and Mailer who ran for mayor of New York City.

On his way from New York City to Chicago to convince an old friend to give him a recommendation on his application, Zuckerman brings the reader into specific moments in his life. There is the pain of his mother's death and his travels to Florida for her funeral, which is the last time he saw his family. There is a letter from a distinguished academic named Milton Appel who critiques his work and now wants him to write a pro-Israel essay following the 1973 Egyptian-Syrian attack on Yom Kippur.

The action of the novel goes everywhere. One moment Zuckerman is impersonating Appel and explaining his love of pornography to a limo driver and the next he is comforting a friend's father who is weeping after losing his wife. There are moments of reflection about the relations between sons and "the last old-fashion fathers," as well as a hopeless, exasperated argument about the merits of extravagance.

Things jump about while questions and conflicts are raised and contemplated, making the narrative seem like a mess. Then comes the wonderfully thought-out ending of Zuckerman's reaffirmation in life.

During an argument, he falls and smashes his face into many pieces. The injury forces him to spend a considerable amount of time in surgery. Zuckerman ends a new man, making rounds in the hospital as a doctor's assistant.

For the first time in a while, he is happy.

Hunter is a controversial writer who speaks his mind. He is also from Maine, or "Vacationland."

Be wary of sailing on the jealou'sea': What Would C. Do? Advice from an Anonymous Friend

Posted by C.

Ahoy, matey! Now that the sun has come out to play, we can flounder to the green to cure our scurvy skin, whether it is sunbathing, playing your guitar or walking along the tightrope.

To the people who climb trees: I know this might be considered jealousy of your ninja squirrel-like abilities, but if you bust a nut, this is a fair warning that people will laugh before we worry or wait for you to pop right up like a cat.

My point? This campus is not a backdrop for your rendition of Jackass, nor is it looking for any more freaky, climbing critters. In any case, please videotape.

Dear C.,

Over winter break I hooked up with a good friend and it ended really badly. Now we are trying to be friends again. But he's starting to get flirty and I don't know what to do. Should I have "a talk" with him?

-Floundering "Friend"

Dear Floundering "Friend,"

Regardless of what you consider "really badly" — whether he took double the time to answer a text or did something as dramatic as on Gossip Girl — do you know what you want? You need to consider what it is you want out of the friendship.

If you really like him, then let the relationship take its natural course toward something that can possibly be great. If you are not feeling it and the hookup left a funky taste in your mouth, I would not take the flirting too seriously.

Sometimes friends unintentionally flirt because they are comfortable with one another. Or maybe he might be trying to diffuse the situation by way of flirting.

Once it borderlines sweet nothings and drunken caresses, then I would consider other signs that your fishy friend might want to swim breast stroke with you. If that time comes, make sure you consider his feelings and find a way to make the conversation as light and relaxed as possible.

Dear C.,

My boyfriend went away to A.C. (Atlantic City) the other weekend and I got very paranoid and we ended up fighting. I tried explaining to him that it's not that I think he'd actually do anything; I'm just not good at trusting people. How do I explain to him that I trust him to the extent that I can trust people in general?

-Trust-Scurvy

Dear Trust-Scurvy,

If it is any consolation, I would be equally paranoid about a boyfriend going to AC. However, I would never let him know it. Not telling the boyfriend about your paranoia and instead wishing him a good time sets his weekend off to a great start because he knows he has such a cool girlfriend.

You might bite all your nails off by the time he returns, so make sure to surround yourself with your best girlfriends. But this does not mean you get to vent about your boyfriend the entire time. Send him a text halfway through the weekend saying you hope he is having a great time, but do not expect a quick response or a long conversation.

When you tell a boyfriend you do not trust people in general, it makes him feel like he will never be able gain your trust. Figure out the root of your trust issues. This self-evaluation will not only help with your boyfriend, but in other relationships, too.

Comparing that failed relationship to your current relationship will help you understand that some people can be trusted more than others, but the only way to find that out is to communicate why you have these fears.

Hopelessness is a buzz-kill before a poppin' weekend with the boys, so try and make an effort to trust him more than other people around you, especially if there is no reason why you should not him.

Hearts and Stars,C.

The Local serves up classic pub fare: One stop for local beer, Irish food, international teas and sustainable ambiance

Posted by Erin Dillon

Although not a local best-kept-secret, The Local Pub and Teahouse falls under the Skidmore student radar. Located at 142 Grand Avenue, The Local is hidden in the Beekman Street Art District — not quite in the middle of nowhere, but a walk from the nearest 473 bus stop.

The Local Pub and Teahouse maintains a casual sports-bar atmosphere with a sophisticated twist. It is a small space with a cozy ambiance about it. Thick, wooden furniture, a roaring fireplace and a deep red motif create a richness in the restaurant.

To start, we ordered a small pot of a sweetly understated honey chai tea. We sipped and caught glimpses of a baseball game, but the televisions were in no way a disruption. The restaurant was filled with sports fanatics and tea enthusiasts alike.

The menu weaves traditional English and Irish cuisine with various American classics. Some daintier items include tea sandwiches (sans crusts, of course) and a selection of organic teas. At the other end of the spectrum, The Local offers hearty dishes like Shepherd's Pie and Steak ‘n' Chips. For the conventional folk there is the Ploughman's Lunch, consisting of warm bread, a chunk of cheese, tomato wedges and stone-ground mustard. For the timid, Caesar salad and nachos are available.

I went with the veggie burger — lame, I know. But I was intrigued. The Local makes it with grilled eggplant, roasted red peppers and mozzarella. The roll was fresh and the sandwich good overall, although a bit bland without the balsamic served on the side. Also, my teeth were not quite sharp enough to sever the tough eggplant skin.

My meal set me back a mere $10, including tip. Everything is modestly priced with the most expensive item being $11. The food and atmosphere quality is exceptional for these prices.

The Local also displays a glass case filled with beautiful, drool-inducing desserts. There were three options when I visited: two cheesecakes and a red velvet cake. However, I dodged dessert, despite its allure.

Whether stopping in to play darts or practice your tea manners, the Local is sure to hit the spot.

Erin Dillon is first-year student with an exceptionally advanced palate.

Rule No. 1: Always read the book before you watch the movie: Stranger than Fiction

Posted by Hunter Prichard

About eight months ago I saw a movie called "The Trial", which was made in the ‘60s and starred Anthony Perkins and Orson Welles. The acting was good and it had some good scenes. However, the entire thing was confusing, hard to watch and a little boring.

When I read Franz Kafka's novel, The Trial, I realized how great it was. The film might be ruined for my for perpetuity, but the book — and Kafka in general — is a favorite.

Set in a dystopia Europe, the novel concerns Joseph K., an average, young man trying to please others as he rises in ranks as the manager of a city bank and is arrested and prosecuted for a crime that is never explained. Simply, officers come one morning, put him under arrest and tell him to go to the courts at a certain time.

The rest of the book follows K. as he falls for a cute neighbor, Fraulein Burstner, recruits a powerful lawyer by way of his uncle, has a morbid talk with a struggling artist who gives him a full explanation of the ways of the court (according to him, is nearly impossible for a man to be fully acquitted of the "crime") and is eventually executed in the final passages. The finality of K. should not come as a surprise to on who has any knowledge of Kafka's work – the brilliance of the story comes not from the shock or the movement of the plot but of the mood and pathos of the story.

I have already mentioned the dystopia in which K. is living; it is a world that influenced the next eighty years of science fiction. The frightening point about this world is the detachment and austerity of the law officials who put K. under arrest. Given that no actual crime has ever taken place, K. is the victim of a court-ordered destruction. Although the story is only of one man, there seems to be a systematic holocaust taking place.

The final two chapters are the best in the book. First, there is a brilliant interlude in action in which K. enters an abandoned cathedral. He believes he is there to lead an Italian client of the bank around the city. Instead, he has a long conversation with a priest. The priest knows everything about him, but K. knows nothing of him; shadows shade most of the man's face, so he is nearly hidden.

The conversation between the two concerns a parable titled, "Before the Law," that can quickly be described as a story in which a man stands outside a doorway and attempts to bribe the doorkeeper to let him inside. Years past and the man is still sitting there. Finally he is on his deathbed, and he sadly asks the keeper why he is not kept out. The doorkeeper tells him that he cannot let him in because the door is only for him, and then he shuts the door.

K. does not understand the story, and there are many pages of analysis and conversation between him and the priest. The conversations are a little boring if one reads quickly, but they explain a good deal about confusion and discordance if read patiently.

The final scene of the book — the execution of Joseph K — is fantastically written even though Kafka originally left the book unfinished. K. is led to his death by two men and he is killed. His final words are "like a dog," a fitting conclusion to a novel about a human treated like a caged animal.

Hunter Prichard is an English major from Maine, or "Vacationland."

Sunny days and flower cupcakes: A Sprinkle in Time

Posted by Katie Lane

Is it summer yet?

I know it is still cold and rainy outside, but all I can think about is summer. And when I think about summer, I think about these cupcakes.

This article is going to be a little unorthodox, o.k.? I am not going to give you a detailed recipe or exact instructions.

Instead, I am going to tell you that serving a plate of adorable edible sunflowers will result in the following: smiles, giggles, grins and, eventually, bellyaches after your friends eat three cupcakes loaded with Oreos, frosting and M&Ms.

But these cupcakes are really what baking is all about for me. They are just plain happy.

I do not know about you, but I am feeling the stress of senior year. My brain is whirring with papers, group projects and final exams, not to mention the whole part about finding a job and place to live in six short weeks.

Honestly, I have not even really had time to bake any treats as stress-relief. All I can do is pull up these pictures of sunny little cupcakes and try to visualize myself eating them on a beach in a bikini.

O.K., maybe eating cupcakes in a bikini is a little ironic, but you know what I mean.

I wish I could tell you that simply looking at this photo would make the stress of the final days of Spring 2011 dissipate into a sugary bliss, but it cannot and will not.

It can provide some temporary relief, though (see above: smiles, giggles and grins). You can even make these yourself right in your Scribner kitchen!

Yep, that is right. Look below: I am instructing you to use a cake mix, canned frosting and highly processed cookies and candies. Just go with it.

They are from a fabulous book called "Hello, Cupcake!" by Karen Tack and Alan Richardson, which is full of fun, little cupcake creations that you can make with very few tools.

We can do it, guys!

THINK SUMMER!

THINK SUNFLOWERS!

THINK LADYBUGS!

THINK CUPCAKES!


Sun Flower Cupcackes

Ingredients:

Yellow cake box mix and corresponding ingredients

2 cans vanilla frostingww

Food coloring

Oreos (regular and mini)

M&Ms

Black decorating gel

Directions:

Step 1. Whip up your favorite yellow cake box mix. One box should make 24 cupcakes.

Step 2. Combine some white frosting (Betty Crocker?) with a few drops of green food coloring and mix well. Spread on cooled cupcakes.

Step 3.  Do the same with some yellow/orange food coloring. Scoop it into a Ziploc bag, press out the excess air and seal. Reinforce the corner of the bag with six overlapping layers of Scotch tape. Pinch the corner flat and cut out a small V-shape to make the leaf tip.

Step 4.   Artfully arrange regular Oreos and mini Oreos on your frosted cupcakes. Use the Ziploc bag to pipe petals around each Oreo.

Step 5.   Press M&Ms onto flowers and decorate like ladybugs with black decorating gel.

Step 6.   Eat in the sun while wearing a bikini.

Students create a gap year program: First Year Experience chapter for gap-year students organized

Posted by Mariel Kennedy

Skidmore's First Year Experience aims to aid a student transition from high school to college living by implementing first-year, peer mentors, pre-orientation programs and a plethora of other resources.

Special programs and events also exist for incoming students of color, international students and transfer students. Soon, students who deferred a year will also be able to have a program in the FYE dedicated specifically to their needs.

The idea for a deferred-students program came from Anna Graves '14 and Josh Speers '14, both of whom deferred a year before coming to Skidmore.

"The idea is out there with other colleges, and there are even schools that are encouraging students to take a year off … We are getting this idea from our own experiences in wishing we had a program like this as first-years," Graves said.

Graves said she spent her year in a number of productive ways, ranging from working on an organic farm to working with nonprofits and environmental internships to even sneaking into classes at the prestigious Brown University. She ended her gap year by moving from Rhode Island to California to be a climbing instructor in the Sierra-Nevada's.

Speers, who could not be reached for contact by press time on Thursday, spent his gap year working with the Governor of Massachusetts before moving to Denver, CO, and playing music, according to Graves.

Graves said she and Speers both wanted to meet more students, like themselves, who had chosen to defer. "We wanted to create a network to meet each other and learn about all the different experiences," Graves said. "The transition from a year off is hard, because students are coming from a world that doesn't feel or look like college at all."

Graves also stressed the importance of this network because most students who defer are older than their peers, which Graves says can make a difference in connecting with other first-year students.

The main goal of the program, according to Graves, is to give students a bigger outlet to meet and connect with different people.

The program is being set up with the coordinators of the FYE program, who Graves describes as "extremely supportive … and really willing to help." The program will start with a deferred students dinner during first year orientation week. It will continue throughout the first semester with slightly less formal meetings. In addition, there will be "peer friends," who Graves describes as upperclassmen who deferred a year and who will be available to students throughout the semester. However, Graves said the relationship with a "peer friend" is "not to be a formal relationship like there is with a peer mentor."

Graves and Speers are working with similar programs at other schools — Princeton, UNC Chapel Hill and Harvard — to establish and expand Skidmore's program. Though no students attended the informational meeting on March 29, Graves said, "The interest has been extremely high in all the deferred students that have heard about it. Almost everyone has been excited about the prospect of meeting other deferred students."

Matt Gaydar '14, who took a gap year before enrolling, says the program sounds interesting, but lacking in purpose. Gaydar spent his year , which he says was denfinitely beneficial to him, participating in three different programs, leading him to travel around the U.S. and to South America, Africa and Spain. While traveling, Gaydar learned many things from outdoor skills with Outward Bound to African drumming and dance.

"I think that having a program like this would be interesting, although I personally do not see the point … I actually felt more motivated and ready for college after the gap year. I do not really see the need to separate gap year students anymore," Gaydar said.

Still, Grave, Speers and their potential members are enthused and excited about the upcoming program and encourage students who deferred a year to contact them and join the network that they call "awesome to be a part of."

Owner of Moosewood Restaurant lectures on experiences

Posted by Erin Dillon

David Hirsch, co-owner of the prominent Moosewood Restaurant in Ithaca, NY, visited Skidmore on March 29. Skidmore Nutrition Action Council, also known as SNAC, presented Hirsch in Emerson Auditorium, where he spoke about his experience in the many Moosewood facets.

Hirsch started out with an architecture degree from City College of New York, but soon found himself working at Moosewood after a not-so-exciting job as a Cornell fraternity cook. "[Moosewood] was so much fun, everybody was so pleasant," Hirsh said.

Hirsh has since advanced from his entry-level position and now gives lectures and cooking classes across the country, in addition to his work on recipe development and Moosewood's line of cookbooks.

Moosewood Restaurant began in 1973 and changed ownership in 1976, Hirsh being among the new group of collective owners. Hirsh explained the concept was to serve food that the owners liked to eat. "The feeling was ‘Hey gang, let's open a restaurant,'" Hirsch said.

Meat was on the original Moosewood menu, but soon the menu evolved to be meatless and less dependent on dairy products and eggs and even offering vegan dishes.

Hirsh mentioned the importance of having healthy, "whole" dishes low in fat and rich in vegetable content.

Moosewood is not only vegetarian, but also nutritious. Hirsh's passion for creating a truly healthy meal seems obvious. Moosewood uses as many organic and local ingredients as possible.

Because of the frequent menu changes, the chefs have to get creative with what is available. Thankfully, there is a database of 12 Moosewood cookbooks on to rely on.

The collective owners have all contributed to Moosewood's cookbook library. Hirsh has worked on each, "Low-Fat Favorites" and "Simple Suppers" to name a few.

The first cookbook was published in 1978, and popularity has since soared. "There are more customers, people making pilgrimages," Hirsh said.

Hirsch emphasized Moosewood's role as a trendsetter in the vegetarian scene. The restaurant has been thriving for the past 30 years, its popularity increasing with each cookbook sold.

"The menu has to be up-to-date in terms of what people want," Hirsch said, "our menu changes every day."

And what do people want? "Everyone disagrees about what healthy is," Hirsch said.

Still, he has seen interest in vegetarianism grow. "A lot of our customers are interested in having meatless meals — some are vegetarians, most are not," Hirsh said.

Attendees nearly filled the auditorium, eager to question David about everything from local produce to his favorite type of veggie burger.

One student asked about Moosewood's motive for serving vegetarian cuisine.

Surprisingly, Hirsh said that ethics and nutrition — while vital to Moosewood — were less important than "playing with the challenge." Moosewood clearly operates in a quite imaginative and experimental manner.

When a student inquired how Moosewood has maintained its popularity for so many years, Hirsh responded, "We became a destination, that made an enormous difference."

Moosewood Restaurant has proven to be a dynamic business, catering to the mores of our generation and drawing people to Ithaca despite the town's remoteness.

How to win in the housing lottery

Posted by Taylor Dafoe

It is that time of year again: the puzzling process we call room selection. It can seem to be a straining time for everybody, but in an attempt to curb unwanted stress, this is a walk-through of the process and an attempt to clear up some commonly asked questions.

There are four basic requirements you will need to meet before being eligible to choose housing.

First, your tuition bill must be paid. Second, you must be free of outstanding sanctions within the college. Third, you must be a current student on the Skidmore campus. You will not be able to select if you are traveling abroad or living off-campus. Fourth, you must complete a preliminary application, available online on the Res Life website, before the selection process.

Additionally, there are a few changes in the housing selection process this year. Maybe the biggest change is that there will be no adjoining singles in the dorms. That means regardless of your own number you will not be able to pull lower-numbered friends into your suite. Everyone will choose their living arrangements individually at the time they are assigned to do so.

Substance-free housing will once again be offered as a living option next semester, occupying the third floor of Rounds Hall. There will be an application process for living on this floor, and the most appropriate candidates will be selected.

Finally, there has been a change in the number system that positions students' time slots for selecting housing. It is now one rotation of numbers, spanning from one to 2300. Classes are divided roughly into sectors of 700, with seniors being the first (number one through 700), juniors the next (701 through 1400) and so on. The lowest numbers will have the first time slots.

In regard to the process of choosing your respective living situation, there are a few things you should know.

The housing selection process will not be online this year; you will have to do it in person during the timeslot you are assigned. It will take place in the basement of Wiecking Hall.

Those in charge of the housing selection ask that you take care of questions and ameliorate any potential problems before the morning of your room selection, so as not to delay the process for others. More times than not, most questions can be answered simply by visiting the Res Life webpage on the Skidmore website.

Of course it is simply not possible to satisfy the individual wants of everybody within the student body, and though the Office of Residential Life is more than willing to help in any way it can, keep in mind that there is always a possibility that you do not end up with your first housing choice.

Remember that the Office of Residential life is a resource at your disposal – feel free to stop in to the office at any time during the week with questions or concerns. Hopefully the housing selection process will be a painless one for everybody this year.

Definitions, denials and decisions: What Would C. Do? Advice from an Anonymous Friend

Posted by C.

Since this is an interesting, diverse topic week, I thought I would consider a word that seems to be the "Skidmore word" of the 2010-2011 school year: BIDDIE. What exactly is a biddie, you ask? The submissions on UrbanDictionary describe it as:

**Disclaimer: The quote is excessively long because I believe this incorporates all that is complicating in an overly used word.

"1. In a generic usage, biddie is the female counterpart of a bro. Where a bro is overly male, overly stupid, and often intoxicated, the biddie is overly female, overly stupid and often intoxicated ... Pejorative but can also be used in a friendly context.

2. A potential for sex. This usage emphasizes the positive aspects of femininity (being hot, being available) and does not always (but can) encompass the more pejorative connotations of the word.

3. A total mess. This usage emphasizes the pejorative aspects ... and does not always (but can) encompass the more complimentary connotations of the word.

This word has been tossed around all year, and it seems we are a bit confused about the true meaning: is it a term of endearment or a term of humiliation? Let me know what you think at SkidWWCD@gmail.com

Dear C.,

My roommate walked in while I was masturbating. Now, it's so awkward…he doesn't look me in the eye. Should I pretend it didn't happen?

Lost in Lubrication

Dear Lost in Lube,

You would be surprised about how often this actually happens — more than you would think and more than you would want it to happen.

If pretending it did not happen is comfortable for you, take that route. However, ignoring the subject may take you down a tense road. If you want, bring it up as casually as possible. Begin by apologizing; this is an awkward situation for both of you, so it is best to nip it in the butt. Perhaps he will sympathize with you, since it could have happened to him, too. The best advice I can give: before you proceed with your five-knuckle shuffle, hold on for one second and lock the door.

Dear C.,

When choosing a place to study abroad, should I base my decision on my academics — completing my major? Or choose a country I've always wanted to visit?

Traveler 101

Dear Traveler 101,

I found myself in this predicament. I decided going abroad is about going to a country where I have never been before, taking classes that are not offered at Skidmore and having a barrel of fun — especially at Oktoberfest. Could I have an amazing time in a country that would further my major? Yes. But I would not have the same level of excitement.

Now consider your situation: are you behind in your major? If so, you might need to compromise and make the system work for you. Look for classes that are similar to your major in your first choice country; ask your advisor and major chairman while professing your love of the country, and hopefully they will consider it.

You might be struggling the rest of your Skidmore career to finish your major, but going to a country you are passionate about might be worth it

Stars and Hearts, C.

Students volunteering with local dementia patients

Posted by Mariel Kennedy

Many students do not give much thought to the local Wesley Community; the building complex may seem to be little more than a stopover that delays the bus trip to downtown Saratoga Springs. On the contrary Wesley means much more not only to residents and staff members, but also to several Skidmore students looking for volunteer work.

For more than 35 years, the Wesley Community, located at 131 Lawrence Street, has offered what its website calls "an innovative combination of independent housing for older adults and skilled nursing care on a single site."

Services range from apartment complexes to assisted living to in-and-out-patient rehabilitation to long-term care and beyond.

The Wesley Care Center, the complex providing services in long-term care and adult day services, also provides Skidmore students with the chance to brighten the days of many residents through literature.

Interested students can spend time volunteering with Wesley's reading program through 2 Victoria, the floor designated for dementia patients. Students can sign up to come to the center and read to patients with early-stage dementia or Alzheimer's Disease on a regular basis or on a schedule that works for them; times are flexible.

Trudi A. Cholewinski, program manager for 2 Victoria, explains the program developed from Saratoga Reads, a local program in which community members read a book and engage in discussions and events pertaining to the book and the experience.

Recommended types of readings are episodic pieces, short stories, poetry or anything that can be read in full during the 30 to 45 minute timeslot.

Regardless of the material being read, volunteers are both encouraged and expected to be engaging and interactive. Cholewinski said, "The main thing about our residents is that they need someone to speak a bit louder, slower and clearly. Read with enthusiasm. Ask questions. Get imaginative. If the book has pictures, show the pictures to everyone. The one thing they don't want is someone just sitting and reading. It is more of a discussion."

Carol Brown '13 has been actively volunteering with the reading program since the fall semester of her first year at Skidmore.

"Reading aloud is one of the best ways to entertain dementia patients in a nursing home. It can keep them more alert. It can help stimulate their memories," Brown said.

Like Cholewinski, Brown stresses the importance of engaging residents during sessions. Brown feels energy and animation are key, saying, "Stop reading and tell a story, get up and show them pictures, act out a scene, use voices for characters, do anything you can to keep them engaged." Brown says she likes to sing aloud and make sound effects as she reads, adding that it is fine if you do anything embarrassing since the patients will not remember during your next visit.

There can be difficulties associated with working with dementia patients. Brown said, "The hardest part about working in the dementia unit is that the residents will often fall asleep while your reading." However, she says that volunteers just need to understand it is not personal or disrespectful.

Cholewinski said, "The patients generally enjoy the visits from the students/volunteers. Our folks have short-term memory loss. They may not remember that the person came the last time, but in the moment they enjoy it. Also, they enjoy discussing books/stories from the old days, they enjoy reminiscing." Brown describes the residents as some of the sweetest people she has ever met.

Though there are no prerequisites for a position, Cholewinski says she asks potential volunteers to shadow a reader and take a tour of the floor to get an idea of the job and environment. Before being hired, potential volunteers are typically screened.

Again, positions are flexible. Each month, Cholewinski sends out an e-mail to volunteers containing available timeslots. Volunteers can sign up for one or more reading slots.

Cholewinski added, "I am open to suggestions for books, or new ideas to the program. That's the beauty of our floor, we are forever changing and making things better."

Brown says there are several benefits of the program, mentioning specifically creating a connection with the Saratoga Springs community and interacting with peoples who can be underserved by the community. The added knowledge of improving the lives of others is not that bad either.

"More than anything I'll remember every time I made them laugh. Sometimes you'll think the whole room is asleep, and you'll read something funny, and all of a sudden it will come alive because they got the joke too. Those are the moments when you can feel how big of an impact you're making on their lives," Brown said.

The exotic taste of Indian cuisine in coastal Maine

Posted by Erin Dillon

I have lived on the coast of Maine for my entire life and I absolutely hate lobster; luckily the restaurants surrounding me offer much more than just seafood and chowder.

Portland and its suburbs have every cuisine imaginable, and it is all delicious. Bombay Mahal is no exception. Brunswick, Maine is about a 30 minute drive north from Portland. Maine Street is bustling with shops, cafés, galleries and plenty of Bowdoin students.

Among the countless restaurants is Bombay Mahal, an authentic and cozy Indian restaurant.

Bina and Raj Sharma opened Bombay Mahal 20 years ago, and it has been thriving among the locals ever since.

Bina and Raj go beyond average customer service by making friendly conversation and asking every patron where he or she is from. At Bombay Mahal every customer is treated like part of the Sharma family.

As I walk in I am transported from a frigid and gray Maine winter to a warm and lively India.

The restaurant itself is beautiful, dimly lit and adorned with Indian tapestries and lamps. The menu is extensive but not overwhelmingly so. The menu includes traditional rice, seafood, chicken, lamb and vegetarian dishes.

My table starts with Dal Paratha, a whole wheat bread filled with lentils, ginger and spices. As an entrée, I have the Shahi Aloo, a vegetarian dish of spiced potatoes sautéed in a tomato onion sauce with almonds.

The food is hearty, so I end my meal with a simple cup of Darjeeling tea. Despite the bill having been paid, Raj still offers us more tea.

It is now nearly 9 p.m. and people continue to trickle into the restaurant. There is no rush, so we stay for a while and enjoy the comfortable and exotic atmosphere.

Bombay Mahal allowed me to momentarily live in India, and hopefully those outside of Maine can experience a faraway meal on somewhere on the east coast.

Stay friends or take the plunge into the DEEP end?: What Would C. Do? Advice from an Anonymous Friend

Posted by C.

We are currently facing the home stretch of the school year, while winter is still trying to hold on to its gray glory.

However, winter is not the only one needing to let go. Sometimes we find ourselves holding onto failed relationships or failed potential relationships.

Regardless of how the relationship started — with a booty call, through a series of Facebook chats and texts or through a friendship — when ends, we often cannot help but think of our newly ex-lover and what went wrong. Even if the relationship did not have the love at first sight preamble, it does not make it easier to let go and forget.

When it comes to matters of the heart, perhaps holding onto a memory or thought of a person, positive or negative, is more fulfilling than the "what if" factor.

If we do not allow something to blossom, we cannot appreciate what we have been missing.

Hey C.,

Which is better, a fleeting friendship where the only regret is uncertainty or a fleeting love affair where the only regret is losing that very friendship?

-DEEPly confused

Dear DEEPly,

I am never one for regrets, even the menial pizza slice … or two. Feeling regret is something we all struggle with on a day-to-day basis, and the bigger the slice the more we imagine it around our waist.

Consider your situation: is the regret of always wondering worse than the loss of a friendship? The bigger question might be, how well do you deal with regret?

Try and imagine both outcomes, especially if you do not tell him/her, and how you will feel if you miss your chance and he/she ends up with someone else.

Another thought to consider is whether you can maintain the friendship without your feelings getting in the way?

I believe the healthiest relationships blossom from friendship. If you believe the relationship is worthwhile (and it is not only an excuse to get in his/her pants) take this opportunity to be spontaneous and do something that has a higher chance of success than a pizza diet.

Stars and Hearts,C.

E-mail me at SkidWWCD@gmail.com with questions.

Privacy is guaranteed.

Advice can remain unpublished upon request

A new spin on a classic breakfast: A Sprinkle in Time

Posted by Katie Lane

What did you do on your spring break?

Perfect your Florida tan? Sleep until noon every day? Play Settlers of Catan with your little brothers?

Sure, those are all valid ways to spend your spring break.

But me, I made homemade Pop Tarts instead.

I never even really liked Pop Tarts that much. Especially the ones with the strawberry filling. Something about that taste of artificial fruit just did not jive well with me. Which is funny because I loved Toaster Strudels, which probably do not have any more real fruit in them than pop tarts. But I digress.

See, I like these Pop Tarts. Want to know why? I will tell you the secret.

They are not really Pop Tarts. They are flaky, gooey, sweet, buttery, pockets of yummy.

When I say buttery, I mean eating one of these things is equivalent to stuffing several tablespoons of butter in your mouth with some sugar and sprinkles and swallowing it whole.

But to make that experience a little more pleasant, those ingredients are magically made into layers of delicate pastry that contain just the right amount of sweet strawberry jam.

The sprinkles … well sprinkles just make everything awesome.

I would not advise eating these every day unless you want to go up a pants' size by the end of the month. These are a spring break, time-to-relax-and-stuff-your-face special kind of treat.

Forget the Pop Tarts of your childhood —those hard, artificial, chalky slabs of chemicals. Yeah, I went there.

Move over Kellogg's.


Homemade Pop Tarts

Adapted from Smitten Kitchen

Pastry

2 cups (8 1/2 ounces) all-purpose flour

1 tablespoon sugar

1 teaspoon salt

1 cup (2 sticks or 8 ounces) unsalted butter, cut into pats

1 large egg

2 tablespoons (1 ounce) milk

Stir together flour, sugar and salt in a medium bowl.

Rub in the butter with your fingers or a pastry cutter until the butter is in pea-sized chunks or smaller.

Gently whisk together the egg and milk in a small bowl and add to butter/flour mixture, stirring until the dough comes together. You may need to use your hands and knead the wet ingredients into the dry to get a uniform dough.

Split the dough in half and make two rectangular blocks. Chill for 30 minutes or so.

Take one piece of dough and roll out on a floured counter until 1/8 inch thick. Cut pop tarts to desired size (roughly 3×5 for large pop tarts or 1.5×3 for minis). Repeat with second block of dough.

Filling

1 large egg (to brush on pastry)

3/4 cup strawberry jam

1 tablespoon of cornstarch dissolved in 1 tablespoon of water

Mix together the jam and cornstarch mixture. Brush half of your rectangles with the beaten egg (used to seal the edges) and spoon a heaping table spoon of filling into the center of each.

Place another rectangle of dough on top and carefully seal the edges with your finger.

Use a fork to press ridges along the outside of each pop tart, and poke holes in the top layer of dough with a fork, making sure the holes go all the way through the top layer of dough.

Chill pop tarts (can be uncovered) in the fridge while preheating the oven to 350 degrees. Bake for 20 minutes or until lightly golden at edges. Cool on pan.

Topping

confectioner's sugar

milk

sprinkles

Pour some sugar into a bowl (1 to 2 cups) and add milk a little at a time, stirring with a whisk, until the glaze is fluid but not very liquidy. Whisk until all lumps are dissolved.

Pour generously onto each pop tart and add sprinkles.

 Let glaze dry before storing.

EAC composting audit tallies college waste

Posted by Julia Leef

When you finish a meal at the Murray-Aikins Dining Hall, dishes go in the accumulator, napkins go in the trash and silverware goes in the tubs. This past week, students added an extra step to their post-meal routines, depositing all excess food into large, plastic tubs. The question is, why?

The Environmental Action Club Composting subcommittee along with Talia Arnow '13, Margot Reisner '14 and Sarah Arndt '14, student interns in the Environmental Studies Program, conducted a food waste audit program to determine if a compositing system would benefit the college. Part of that program was to collect pre and post-consumer waste in the dining hall from Feb. 27 to March 5. Students scraped their excess food into one of four bins in the accumulator area, which 50 student volunteers from the EAC monitored and then weighed. The results revealed that in one week, with a total weight of 6986.50 pounds, the college wastes about a half-ton per day in pre and post-consumer food, which could be used for composting.

"We really had no idea how much waste we were going to get," Arnow, said who is also the co-vice president of the EAC. "And we were so surprised that the numbers were so consistent."

Kate Brittenham '14 was one of the student volunteers who monitored the collection of food scraps in the dining hall. She said that while people told her the location of the bins was inconvenient, especially during "rush hour," overall the reception was warm.

"I thought it went really well and people's general attitude toward the audit and composting in general was really very positive," Brittenham said.

Going into the program, Arnow said the primary focus was to determine the quantity of food waste that could be turned into soil, and that awareness and behavioral changes in the students wasn't a thought at first. "We were simply wanting to collect data for what is the amount of food that we deal with that could go toward a composting program," she said. However, from the start of the program in the dining hall, students began asking questions and showing interest in the club's work. "I think it did promote conversation in the dining hall about food waste," Arnow said. "I think people were almost monitoring each other, and monitoring themselves more."

Riley Neugebauer, campus sustainability coordinator, helps bridges the gap between the students and the administration and acts as the on-campus supervisor for the three interns. According to Riley, Arnow came to her with the idea for a composting program this past semester. The two then met with William Coffey ‘10, who completed an Environmental Studies Capstone project with Nadine Dodge ‘10 that focused on the feasibility of a large-scale composting system at the college. They used the data from a food waste audit conducted in 2009 by Sarah Whateley ‘09 over a period of two days. Several faculty members also attended the meeting, including Karen Kellogg of ES Faculty, Kim Marsella, ES program coordinator and lecturer, Dan Rodecker, director of facilities, and Michael Hall, director of financial planning and budgeting. Neugebauer said she decided to hire interns to research the different aspects of this project, such as how much labor would be needed and what finances would be spent on it, as well as how much money could potentially be saved by using a composting system, whose tentative location is behind the college stables on Daniels Rd.

"We are obtaining additional data and talking with the key stakeholders on campus about what it might look like to start composting at Skidmore," she said, "which would take the dining hall food waste, the horse manure from the stables and grass clippings and leaves from Grounds, and turn it into a valuable soil amendment for our campus, including the student garden."

"We're trying to take the community's concerns into account, and write as much of that as we can into the report." Neugebauer said, adding that the committee spoke with the dining hall staff as well as the workers in the stables, both of whom will be affected by a composting system.

The next step for the committee is to write a recommendation using the data to explain why a composting program would benefit the college, which will be presented at the Academic Festival at the end of the semester. Arnow hopes the administration will realize the importance of composting and support the project.

Neugebauer said the committee would need to make a solid proposal to the capital budget for the next fiscal year, taking financial costs into account. She predicted the site preparation costs would be the largest, but with proper planning, the project will begin to pay for itself.

Composting will continue in the form of a Northwoods project, which was planned by the committee this past semester. In an all student volunteer-run event, EAC members delivered buckets this past weekend to the Northwoods apartments, where the student residents will designate their leftover food for composting instead of throwing it away. Arnow hopes this will prove to be a scale model of the future program, and she said participation is necessary to make the project a success.

Facilities helped construct and pay for the food compost bin, while the subcommittee obtained funding needed to buy the two gallon buckets for each apartment, as well as 10 gallon buckets students will empty their own buckets into. Student volunteers will then empty these 10 gallon buckets into the compost bin.

"It's a great partnership between the Sustainable Skidmore Office and EAC to help bring a student project to reality," Neugebauer said. The interns will gather participation data in Northwoods and the weight of the food obtained and its rate of decomposition in the bin.

Arnow thanks all of the people involved in the program, including the student volunteers, Riley Neugebauer, the student body and the dining hall staff, without whom nothing could have been done. Neugebauer expressed her pleasure in being able to work with students.

"I love it," she said. "It's part of the reason that I like this job so much. To do project-based learning and experiential learning and community organizing, those are things that are my favorite things to do, and with young people in particular." She also encourages the community to give her feedback concerning the composting program. She can be reached by e-mail at rneugeba@skidmore.edu.

"The larger goal here is to help highlight why composting is a good project for Skidmore College," Neugebauer said. "We generate this food waste which can then be not waste at all, but instead an input into something else.

F.Y.E. seeks mentors for fall: How to become a peer mentor for a class of 2015 Scribner Seminar

Posted by Jesse Shayne

With the Spring semester already halfway over, the staff behind the First Year Experience Program has begun thinking ahead to next Fall. Though it will not be long before the incoming class of 2015 will be choosing their Scribner Seminars, each seminar first needs to have a peer mentor assigned to it and the process by which that takes place can be complicated.

There are two ways to become a peer mentor.

Students can either find a professor who needs a peer mentor for his or her class or they can go through the application process to try to get matched up with a professor. No paperwork is required if students find professors in need of mentors on their own.

However, if students hope to get matched up to a Scribner Seminar, they need applications stating why they are good candidates, a teacher recommendation and a brief interview with a member of the FYE staff to figure out which seminars would be the right fit.

Most faculty members choose to pick their own peer mentors but there are always a few who decide to get matched up by the FYE.

"We always have about eight to 10 seminars where the faculty member just says ‘give me somebody,'" said Beau Breslin, director of FYE and professor of Government.

Once a peer mentor becomes assigned to a Scribner Seminar the FYE runs an integrity check on the candidate.

As long as students have decent grades and no serious citations on their records, they are eligible.

The responsibilities begin after all of the seminars have been assigned peer mentors.

Over the summer peer mentors are supposed to get in touch with their mentees and start to get to know them. They should be able to answer any questions that the incoming students may have.

Peer mentors head back to campus about eight days before first-year orientation begins for an orientation of their own.

During this time they are taught how to have conversations about important issues and how to teach mentees about college resources.

"The discussions range from knowing academic services on campus, the alcohol and drug policy, sexual misconduct, academic integrity, citizenship and diversity," Breslin said.

During first-year orientation peer mentors have a big role in leading the newcomers around campus and helping them adjust to their new surroundings.

Peer mentors also plan icebreaking group activities, organize group meals and keep first-year students on schedule.

When the semester begins the peer mentors' role is not quite as intricate as during orientation, but it is still important.

Peer mentors are to attend their Scribner Seminar classes and do the readings while also taking a separate class in how to lead discussions. The class, ID-201, meets once a week for about an hour.

Peer mentors should also be willing to meet with their mentees to talk about any problems they might be having.

Given the responsibilities that come with being a peer mentor, not everyone is suited for the job.

"Broadly a peer mentor has two responsibilities: to model the type of behavior we expect from our very best students academically and socially, and to help the faculty member by working with the first-year students to make the transition as seamless as possible," Breslin said.

Being a peer mentor gets you more than just self-satisfaction. Peer mentors get paid for the time they spend with their students outside of class, including $250 for orientation.

They also receive academic credit. Mentors get one credit for the ID-201 course and two or three credits for the seminar depending on whether they choose to do additional readings for the faculty advisor.

Peer mentors can also live in a single for the price of a double and have the option of living in the same residential hall as their mentees.

It is not all about the pay though. While the peer mentors have a great influence on their mentees, one peer mentor in particular found himself learning just as much from his first-years.

"I definitely took on a different role and tried to act as an older brother figure...I became really close with my students," said Dave Schlenker ‘13, a peer mentor of Africa Through Changing Cinema this past fall.

Peer mentors have an important role in helping first-year students to get accustomed to college.