Post-Mooretem: What Really Happened This Time?: Moorebid Ball's new venue created unexpected dangers for students

Posted by Brendan James

"I was almost trampled downstairs," complains Lucy Greer '12, one of the many Skidmore students who experienced the unforeseen consequences of holding this year's Halloween dance in the Williamson Sports Center.

Lt. Larry Britt was in charge of the 14 Campus Safety officers patrolling the event that night. "We had calls for EMTs, and calls that people were falling down in the hallway," he said.

The main source of the disorder was the corridor connecting the Rec and Dance gyms of Sports Center. The narrow space became an untenable passageway as about 1,400 students in attendance attempted to move between the two gyms.

Another student, Rachel Bier '12 remarked, "I felt like I was going to suffocate in the middle of all those people." Two fights eventually broke out in the corridor, causing even more discomfort and disruption.

At approximately 12:30 a.m., an hour and a half before the event was scheduled to end, Britt decided to shut down the event out of concern for student safety.

"It had to be done. The reason it was closed was because of safety concerns, not behavioral issues — we had some of those too, but that was not the reason the dance had to end," Britt said.

No serious injuries or emergencies resulting from the Sports Center disorder have yet been reported.

According to VP of Residential Affairs Aaron Shifreen, a volleyball tournament that took place earlier in the day prohibited full use of the Center's "big gym," which might have allowed for a more stable venue. Instead the two other gyms were used to account for the large number of students, each allowing for roughly 770 people.

Inter-Hall Board (IHB) was in charge of organizing the event in coordination with Campus Safety and the college administration.

While Student Government Association (SGA) set up stations in the Sport Center entrance to assign Moorebid bracelets and track the number of attendees, many students did not receive bracelets and were unaware of the entire system.

Even with 14 officers besides Britt on duty, control and monitoring of entry became noticeably convoluted within the first hour. Attendence began to reach its peak at 11:00 p.m. and half and hour later it had spun into what Britt called "almost a mob."

It took roughly 10 minutes to get from one gym to the other gym, something that would normally take individuals only a few seconds. But with the heavy traffic from two streams of students going opposite directions, the area became clogged, hot, sweaty, and eventually near-motionless.

Significant overcrowding of the corridors between the two gyms caused stress among the attendees. In some cases students audibly begged each other not to push or shove. People voiced aloud their concern of harm wrought by all the commotion.

Both Shifreen and SGA President Jonathan Zeidan attended several planning meetings with administration and Campus Safety in the weeks leading up to the event. They stress the precautions taken in planning for a completely new venue and emphasized the difficulties in anticipating the reality on the ground.

"Whenever you do something for the first time, it's an experiment," Zeidan said.

Zeidan went on to contextualize the surge in the corridors in connection to the nature of the Moorebid event.

"We tend to think of Moorebid Ball as a dance, but it's also a broader social event. So in the gyms, unlike in Case Center, apart from the dancing you had a lot of overcrowding in these hallways where people were supposed to be able to talk," Zeidan said.

In hindsight, many of the planners admit the lack of concern over what would become the bottleneck corridor. "I guess we didn't fully take that dynamic into account," Shifreen added. Robin Adams, Director of Leadership Activities and the liaison between student planners and the sports center, remarked that, while the behavior of intoxicated students is unpredictable, the bottleneck in the corridor "probably could have been anticipated."

Lt. Britt echoed this sentiment: "Looking back it seems pretty obvious, but in planning this everyone simply figured students would stay in the gyms where the music was."

Moorebid Ball was held originally at Moore Hall, an off-campus site at 32 Union Avenue in Saratoga Springs that served as a residential hall for students until 2006, when the college sold it to NorStar Development. The venue for Moorebid then changed to Case Center up until this year.

According to Campus Safety reports, five ambulances left campus that night, though they were all concerning over-drinking in resident halls and other spots on Campus rather than the Sports Center. One transport was a non-student.

Shut Down: Moorebid Ball terminated early again

Posted by Gabe Weintraub and Brendan James

For the second consecutive year, Moorebid Ball has been shut down early, this time due to dangerous overcrowding in the Rec Gym. The festivities came to a sudden close at approximately 12:30 a.m.

A campus safety officer, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, summed up the incident with two words: "Bad venue."

The change of venue from Case Center to the Williamson Sports Center did little to facilitate the monitoring and control of the event.

"One thing that's clear is that we have not adequately addressed what is the most appropriate venue," said Rochelle Calhoun, dean of student affairs, who was away from the college last weekend. "The ability to have an event of that size and an appropriate venue for it to be safe in continues to be a primary issue."

In the corridor between the Rec and Dance gyms, approximately 1,400 students formed a mass of bodies that left many simply unable to move and travel to and from the different gyms. With a no-reentry policy in place, students had little freedom of movement.

"I was almost trampled downstairs," says Lucy Greer '12. Another student, Rachel Bier '12 said, "I felt like I was going to suffocate in the middle of all those people."

According to VP of Residential Affairs Aaron Shifreen, a volleyball tournament that took place earlier in the day prohibited full use of the larger gym, which might have allowed for a more stable venue.

Moorebid Ball was held originally at Moore Hall, an off-campus site at 32 Union Avenue in Saratoga Springs that served as a residential hall for students until 2006, when the college sold it to NorStar Development. The venue for Moorebid then changed to Case Center up until this year.

It took roughly 10 minutes to get from one gym to the other gym, something that would normally take individuals only a few seconds. But with the heavy traffic from two streams of students going opposite directions, the area became clogged, hot, sweaty, and eventually near-motionless.

Significant overcrowding of the corridors between the two gyms caused stress among the attendees. In some cases students audibly begged each other not to push or shove. People voiced aloud their concern of harm wrought by all the commotion.

 

More details to come.

2011 Kenneth A. Freirich Business Plan Competition under way: Participating students begin workshops to develop their ideas

Posted by Julia Leef

 

30 students have submitted intent-to-compete forms in the Kenneth A. Freirich Business Plan Competition, which will take place over the course of the academic year, hoping to get a share of the $25,000 that will be awarded to students with the best business plans.

The competition is named for Kenneth A. Freirich '90, a serial entrepreneur and president of Health Monitor Network, who returned to the College in 2010 as its first Entrepreneur in Residence. The first competition took place last year.

"One of the things that we're most excited about is that our students are really adept at saying there's a problem that needs to be solved, and they devise ways to solve that problem," said Tim Harper, associate professor and chairman of the management & business department, who along with Roy Rotheim, professor of economics, and Ken Freirich, is organizing and running the competition.

Students will go through a series of workshops until Dec. 9, led by Alison Frey '12 and Todd Powell '12, members of Rotheim's Skidmore-Saratoga Entrepreneurial Partnership, which take place on Tuesdays. These workshops are designed to help participants write a comprehensive business plan and modify it into a presentable format.

"Last year there were only 14 business plans submitted out of the 30 [intents to compete]," Rotheim said. "What we're hoping is that by having this business plan writing workshop is to raise our percentage to 20-25 submissions, and secondly to improve the quality of each of those business plans that are submitted."

Rotheim said that there is a wide diversity of students who are participating in the competition in regards to majors and class years. "It's consistent with what Ken Freirich hoped -- to tap the talents of a wide diversity of students on campus," he said.

The first stage of business plans are due on Jan. 25, when they will be sent to the a panel of judges comprised of successful entrepreneurs, local and non-local, who will review them before the executive summary presentations on Feb. 10.

From these entrants the judges will choose seven finalists, who will then move on to work with Frey and Powell, as well as an alum or parent who is a successful entrepreneur business person and will serve as their mentor. The revised business plans will be due on April 2, followed by the final presentations on April 13, after which three finalists will be chosen to receive funds for their projects.

"It's going to be a very exciting time for us to see the graduation of the proposals in terms of quality," said Harper, referring to the two stages of the competition that students will have to refine their plans.

"I think what it's going to do is it's going to make a more even playing field," Rotheim said. It'll make sure that the English major has just as much of a chance as the management and business major."

One of last year's seven finalists, a group consisting of first-years Zach Rohde '14, Malcolm Perry '14, and Thomas Sellers '14, set up a "MyBad Industries," after receiving the rights to the phrase, "my bad." The company will produce t-shirts and other, as Zach dubs it, "apology lifestyle clothing."

The business proposals are in a variety of stages at this point, with some seeking to improve pre-existing businesses and others merely existing as ideas. One student is writing a business plan for a smartphone application that will notify students when their laundry on campus has finished, as well as where the available machines are.

Rotheim said that one thing he enjoys about this competition is that it brings out the talents of students who have the drive to accomplish something instead of just thinking about it. Harper added that having access to campus resources for the competition also gives students aspiration, even if they do not end up as finalists.

"If a student has an aspiration," he said, "well, that seed has been planted for five years, six years, seven years down the road."

The third organizer and sponsor of the event, Freirich, devotes himself to the competition and is very excited for this year's batch of students, said Harper and Rotheim.

Freirich will be treating all of the participants to dinner at the restaurant Harvest & Hearth to mingle and become acquainted with him and with each other. "He loves this," Rotheim said, "and he inspires them [the students], and so he is so much more than just the person who has come up with the money."

Rotheim said that one of the things that they learned from last year's competition is that "the key to the success of a program at this level is the support services that we provide to the students at every level."

He also emphasized the importance of students working on their own without outside involvement. "When students are working by themselves and are creating their own curriculum, there is a powerful sense of ownership."

EAC meeting focuses on D.C. protest trip and other events: Topics include a change in the D.C. schedule and facilitating the compost system in Northwoods

Posted by Ani Lordkipanidze

In the last two weeks, the Environmental Action Club has encouraged students to join its sponsored trip to Washington, D.C., to protest against the Keystone XL Pipeline on Nov 6.

The bus to Washington, D.C. will depart at 6 a.m. on Sunday, Nov. 6, instead of on Saturday, the original departure date, and will return to the college at around 10 p.m.

EAC members will be in the Atrium of the Murray-Aikins Dining Hall this week, where students may sign up for the trip. Students may also sign up online.

More information about the upcoming protest and the EAC trip can be found here.

For further information, students can contact EAC President Margot Reisner '14.

In addition to organizing the Washington D.C. trip, the EAC is organizing several other events this month, including the Fruit Tree Workshop led by Adam Quist, at 2:30 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 28, in Tisch 202. Students will be able to learn the basics of caring for and managing fruit trees, and will also have a chance to plant them in the Skidmore Student Garden.

Also, on Nov. 1, alumna Hannah Philips '10, an environmental studies major, will help conduct an info session on Overland, a program that offers summer programs for students from the 4th to 12th grade, at 6 p.m. in Emerson Auditorium.

The leaders of the subcommittee for Waste, Talia Arnow '13 and Ceanna Vangelder '14, proposed constructing a trolley to facilitate the transportation of waste from Northwoods. Everett Hoffman '11 and Ripley Sager '12 decided to construct trolleys from aluminum.

"If we make the trolley out of aluminum it would be very safe," said Hoffman, adding that aluminum, as a lighter material than, for instance, lead, would make it easier to work with in construction. The project's completion is anticipated for the end of the semester.

The EAC meets at 9 p.m. on Mondays in Ladd 207. 

Len Jenkin's "Pilgrims of the Night" premieres in the Janet Kinghorn Bernhard Theater: The college's Department of Theater presents a play that conveys the importance of human connection

Posted by Joanne Schwartzberg

Last Thursday, Len Jenkin's "Pilgrims of the Night" premiered in the Black Box studio of the Janet Kinghorn Bernhard Theater, the realization of months of hard work by faculty, alumni, and students alike.

"Len Jenkin is a master storyteller with a theatrical flare for the quirky and scintillating stories that rest in our imagination," director Alma Becker said.

Storytelling proves to be an integral part of the production. The play revolves around a group of travelers who miss a ferry and decide to tell stories to pass the time. As the play progresses, the stories get increasingly bizarre, yet, they all possess morals and reveal important things about the human condition. One life lesson the play imparts is the importance of connection and communication between people.

"We all not only play many roles, but the roles we play are unique, bizarre and crazy characters. This has challenged me to use my voice and body in ways that I would not have necessarily considered in many plays, and filled the rehearsal room with exploration and play," Anne Dufault '12 (Fellow Traveler) said.

According to the cast and crew, the process of creating this play has been an interesting and enlightening one. They had a unique opportunity to meet the playwright, who is also a novelist and director, and perform their work for him.

"It was fascinating to hear about his creative process and the experience of writing and seeing his own show," Grady Gund '12 (Professor Hubert) said.

"The best part of "Pilgrims" has been fostering a sense of community both in and out of the black box. The power of human interaction has guided us all in the process of creating a spectacular experience," Assistant Director Ruth Morrison '12 said.

Designed by Garry Wilson, the set design transformed the space into a ferry terminal. Stage lights were hidden from view and walls were created to hide the backstage area to submerge the audience into the play.

Wilson's scenic design was complemented by lighting and costume by alumni Nate Morgan and Jenna Glendye, respectively.

"Watching the black box evolve from an empty room into a ferry room was astonishing," Jonathan Lee-Ray '15 (Fellow Traveler) said.

"Skidmore's production seamlessly transported us from story to story while always reminding us where we were in real time," Rochelle Katz '12, an audience member, said.

 

Scribner Seminar brings Steven Barnes to campus: Innocent man imprisoned for 19-1/2 years to speak about his experience

Posted by Julia Leef

Forensic Science and Criminal (In)justice, a First Year Experience Scribner Seminar taught by Kim Frederick, an associate professor of chemistry, will play host to Steven Barnes, an innocent man who spent over 19 years of his life in prison, at 7:30  p.m. on Nov. 8 in in Davis Auditorium in a public discussion.

The seminar focuses its studies on such cases of wrongful incarcerations through analyzing actual cases and legal policies, as well as conducting forensic analysis on pieces of evidence. Students also examine ways in which innocent people were convicted due to faulty evidence.

"Mr. Barnes was chosen because he lives and works in Utica, not far from Saratoga Springs, which is also the same community where he was wrongfully convicted," Frederick said. "Our Scribner Seminar course focuses on the misuse of forensic science in the criminal justice system, and the forensic science in Mr. Barnes' case was appalling."

Barnes was convicted in 1989 for the rape and murder of 16-year-old high school student Kimberly Simon. He was incarcerated at 19, the age of most sophomore college students, and was not released until he was 38, after the Innocence Project reopened his case in 2007 and proved his innocence through DNA testing of the sperm cells found on the victim's body and clothing. He was officially exonerated in 2009.

The Innocence Project is, according to its website, "a national litigation and public policy organization dedicated to exonerating wrongfully convicted individuals through DNA testing and reforming the criminal justice system to prevent future injustice."

As of February 2010, 250 people had been exonerated through post-trial DNA testing in the U.S. Branches of the Innocence Project have handled many of these cases.

"I really see this as a big issue in society," said Caroline Bowne '15, a seminar member. "The Innocence Project has exonerated so many people already. A lot of these cases were before DNA testing played such a major part."

Students, faculty and community members will have the opportunity to ask Barnes questions regarding his experience in prison, as well as how the Innocence Project worked for his exoneration. Seminar students will attend a dinner with him before the lecture.

"I think it will open up people's eyes about what it's like to be in prison, what it's like to be wrongfully convicted," Bowne said. "I think students should really just think about the fact that the justice system isn't perfect."

Continuing their involvement in crime and injustice, seminar students also will assemble pamphlets this semester for public defenders across the country, who, Bowne said, do not always receive proper forensic training, which enables such cases as Barnes's to be mishandled.

"There are a lot of cases like these that have slipped through the cracks," Bowne said. "You have to question the abilities of public defenders, sometimes. How much time and effort do they put into each case? How detailed and how thorough are they? Are a lot of people still slipping through, despite DNA evidence being really usable? I think it shows that there are a lot of flaws in the justice system, and I think that's important."

Skidmore workshop to focus on influences of European Union: International scholars to discuss political, economic and global security concerns

Posted by Julia Leef

Visiting scholars of international renown will discuss the European Union's political, security and economic concerns and their connection to the world in light of such events as the death of longtime dictator of Libya, Muammar Gadhafi, and resistance against government austerity measures in Greece, at a free, public workshop, from Oct. 27 to 28 at the College.

The scholars leading the discussions are Kathleen McNamara, associate professor of government and foreign service at Georgetown University, Karsten Geier, a veteran of the German Foreign Ministry and the European Union delegation and Richard Gowan of New York University and the European Council on Foreign Relations.

The Departments of Management and Business, Foreign Languages and Literatures and Government, as well as the International Affairs Program, the Jean Monnet Chair and the European Commission will sponsor the workshop, titled, "The Workshop on the State of the European Union: 2011."

One of the sponsors, the Jean Monnet Chair in European Integration Studies, funded by the European Commission, honors the memory of Jean Monnet, founder and first president of the High Authority of the European Coal and Steel Community.

All conference scholars will participate in the opening panel, "The State of the EU: Political and Economic Perspectives," from 8 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. on Oct. 27 in Gannett Auditorium.

Further discussions will take place concerning the Eurozone debt crisis, the European Union and the U.N. and the European Union in global security before and after the Arab Spring the following day from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. in the Payne Room of the Tang Museum. The workshop will close with a roundtable discussion with the guest speakers and student participants, beginning at 3:15 p.m.

"Whatever happens there [in the EU] affects all of us. American banks are heavily exposed to European debt and the economics are so intertwined. From an American perspective, the more we know, the better," said Roy H. Ginsberg, professor of government and one of the moderators of Thursday's panel discussion.

Ginsberg cites the economic situation in Greece as one of the more pressing issues underscoring the importance of the European Union.

"The EU consists of many of the world's richest countries - it is a major player," Ginsberg said. "The Europeans' influence on global security and international diplomacy can be crucial, especially to nations entering the Arab fall after the dramatic developments during the Arab spring."

For more information, contact Dom Green '12, a student coordinator of the workshop, at dgreen@skidmore.edu

Skidmore's Distinguished Visiting Scientist speaks to student body: Lecture addresses issues of world hunger and biodiversity

Posted by Julia Leef

More than 100 students, faculty and community members attended Distinguished Visiting Scientist Wilhelm Gruissem's lecture, "Can We Still Feed the World in 2050?" at 8 p.m. on Oct. 19, in Gannett Auditorium.

Gruissem is one of the world's leading plant biotechnology experts, and has served as a plant biotechnologist in the Department of Biology at ETH Zurich (Swiss Federal Institute of Technology) since 2000.

The lecture addressed issues of global food security, water availability, bio-energy and climate change. "A Bio-Based Economy must be a part of the solution!" the title page of his presentation stated.

With the growing world population and rising cereal demand (MMT), humans must produce more food than ever before. But, we are producing less food than we did 20 to 30 years ago. More than one billion people in the world are suffering from starvation and increasing malnutrition, and, despite previous predictions, this number has steadily risen.

"We have to produce food where it's needed," Gruissem said. "We have to come up with solutions to help those people who develop agriculture in a way that it is sustainable and can support their lifestyles."

Gruissem also discussed the surge in cereal and oil prices, as well as the major bottleneck that sustainable food security faces. Humans have cultivated 7,000 plant species since the beginning of agriculture. However, only 10 plant species are cultivated today to provide 95 percent of food and feed.

This spreading monoculture is another major threat to food security, Gruissem said. He proposed his own solution to the issue of biodiversity, saying that a select number of genotypes (roughly 10,000 per crop) should be taken from a crop share of more than 100,000 ancestral genotypes per crop. These select genotypes should be characterized and studied at $1 million per genotype. He estimates that the cost of the entire operation would be $30 billion, which is $2 billion less than the 2010 budget of the National Institute of Health.

Much of the lecture promoted the use of gene manipulation technology, such as phenotyping (measuring allelic variation) and marker-assisted selection (MAS) to breed new varieties of plants and to identity those genes that are best suited to maximize yield gains.

Several requirements for this method of improving crops, Gruissem said, include being cost effective and sustainable, as well as making no net contribution to greenhouse gasses and avoiding directly increasing food costs.

The true benefits of genetically modified technology are often either unknown or misrepresented to the public, Gruissem said. European consumers are especially opposed to GM technologies, and certain non-government organizations have declared gene technology a danger, and have even attacked private property. Gruissem's own home has been graffitied.

Several newly improved crops in the market include Anthocyanin-enriched GM tomatoes, which can reduce the high risk of coronary heart diseases, and Beta-carotene enriched Golden Rice, which can reduce vitamin A deficiency.

Gruissem's own lab is working to increase iron concentration in polished rice grains in order to aid the two billion people who suffer from iron deficiency. Currently, his lab has increased the iron concentration with gene technology to 55 percent of the recommended daily intake, and is looking to improve it further.

He also stressed the importance of making plants resistant to environmental stress and able to combat such parasites as the African Cassava Mosaic Virus (CMV), which is responsible for a 24 percent loss of the total production of cassava in Africa each year.

Gruissem concluded by stressing the importance of breeding new crop varieties with a high and stable yield and improved nutritional qualities in order to create a sustainable agriculture. He encouraged using innovative research, efficient breeding and gene technology to ensure a phenotypic diversity of crop plants.

"We have to make sure that we grow food where it is needed," Gruissem said.

Gruissem will remain on campus to meet with members of the college's science faculty and to present to several biology classes this semester. 

Skidmore Shop continues to host local restaurants: Esperanto and Plum Dandy to hand out free samples to students

Posted by Max Siegelbaum

Esperanto, the downtown restaurant known best for its brick of cheese and crust, the doughboy, and local frozen yougurt shop, Plum Dandy, will be handing out free samples of its products at the Skidshop this week.

Esperanto will be visiting on Friday, Oct. 21, from 5 to 7 p.m, while Plum Dandy will visit Saturday at the same time and location.

These visits are part of a larger ongoing promotional program established by Bob Carlton, technology sales and social program administrator of the Skidshop, and the rest of the staff at the store. For the past two years, Carlton has opened the doors to local restaurants, stores and community organizations.

"Last year we had an event for the golf team," Carlton said, "we cleared out the store and set up a driving range." Along with the driving range, the team sold related products as well as provided golf instruction and various prizes. The team used the event to promote its existence and raise money for travel and other expenses.

"We try to showcase the restaurants as well as promote the later hours of the Skidshop," Carlton said. The participating restaurants receive publicity with minimal costs, while the Skidshop receives higher foot traffic at the slower, later hours of operation.

The program was largely created to publicize the Skidshop's late hours of operation. The shop extended its Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday hours from 9:15 a.m. to 7 p.m., a change Carlton said would provide students with an opportunity to pick up any last minute materials they may need.

"We understand that most students do their work later in the day. Students working will realize that they need something, but will be unable to purchase it. Longer hours give these students an opportunity to purchase what they need to finish their work," Carlton said. He added that the shift in hours is directed toward art students, in particular.

Carlton intentionally chooses establishments that have a close relationship with the college, "All restaurants that visit the store take the Skidcard. Once they register with the college, we approach them and invite them to the shop. It allows them to promote their product without having to spend money on something like an advertising campaign," Carlton said.

A schedule of upcoming food vendors can be found on the store's website. Upcoming vendors include Spring Street Deli, Legends Café and Pizza Works. All events will feature free samples and will take place from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m

Gunshot wound at Falstaffs revealed as false alarm: Police and Campus Safety respond to a drug-fueled call for help

Posted by Andrew Shi

At 10:30 p.m. last Wednesday students near Jonsson tower overheard an unexpected commotion as several police squad cars and an ambulance rolled into the parking lot. The authorities were responding to a call about a man said to have been shot at Falstaffs.

The caller was the girlfriend of the man but police have abstained from disclosing the names of either.

According to SSPD Lt. Gregory Veitch the man who claimed he had been shot called his girlfriend who then called police. Lt. Veitch did not know if the girlfriend was a Skidmore student, and she was not present at the scene when police arrived.

"When the officers arrived and talked to the man, they found that he had smoked some type of substance and suffered from hallucinations that he had been shot in the leg," Veitch said.

Director of the Department of Campus Security Dennis Conway who helped direct the police and emergency personnel to Falstaffs says that police found the man alone in his vehicle.

The man, 25, is a former Skidmore student according to Conway. He received medical treatment but was not arrested.

In New York State in order for someone to be arrested for falsely reporting an incident they would have to have the intent of causing a public alarm by making the false report. "In this case the officers were unable to prove that the person intended for a large emergency response to be initiated," Lt. Veitch said. "Although that did in fact happen, the intent was missing."

As to what caused the hallucination, Veitch says that "we believe that he had been smoking bath salts." Bath salts are banned in New York.

The banned bath salts — not be confused with mineral bath salts used for bathing — contain MPDV, a psychoactive drug and is compared to synthetic marijuana.

Although no arrest was made, according to Conway there may very well be consequences from the school for the man. Conway and several other school officials are currently deliberating the situation. According to Conway they are in talks about banning the former student from Skidmore.

Career Services discussion and Student Government elections held at SGA meeting: Director of Career Services receives feedback from SGA member, followed by SGA elections

Posted by Ani Lordkipanidze

On Oct. 18, Deborah Loffredo, the newly hired director of Career Services, came to the Student Government Senate meeting to receive feedback from SGA members.

Loffredo is new to the college, and wanted to hear ideas from SGA members about improving Career Services, as well as its relations with the student body. She asked SGA what level of involvement Career Services usually has in students' lives, as well as whether or not this involvement is enough.

SGA members suggested that Career Services become more involved with first years and sophomores. One of the ways in which this could be done would be placing the PowerPoint presentations that representatives of Career Services show to first years in their first semester online for later viewing.

In other business, elections followed the Career Services discussion for Willingness-to-serve positions. Candidates delivered speeches to the Senate, including William Romano '13 (Integrity Board), Sibo Gama '15 (First-Year senator), Laura Venner '14 (Speakers Bureau), Arissa Fram '14 (Parking Court and Traditions Committee) and Chantal Moore '15 (Traditions Committee). All candidates who spoke at the meeting were elected to their desired positions.

Student clubs addressed the Senate, requesting finances to sponsor activities. The Hispanic Awareness Club's President and Treasurer Jovany Andujar '13 asked for money to sponsor a comedian from New York City, who will perform at 10 p.m. Nov. 11 at the Spa.

Senators Raiza Nazareth '12 and Amanda Seres '14 presented changes made in Willingness-to-serve codes, which were amended to reflect current practices, as well as to provide more detail on the job of the Willingness-to-serve coordinator and to further clarify the Willingness-to-Serve process.

Student Government meets at 8 p.m. Thursdays in Ladd Hall 307.

Skidmore College's Facebook page receives its 5,000th 'like' this month: Communications works to expand the college's online presence

Posted by Adrian Appleman

On Oct. 3, the college reached a landmark 5,000 "likes" on its Facebook page.

With 5,055 "likes" as of Oct. 20, the page is steadily growing in popularity. Though the Skidmore College Facebook page is the College's primary social media outlet, it is not the only social networking page affiliated with the college.

The College has been actively building its online presence since the summer of 2010, and Daniella Nordin, the college's online community manager, says there is still more to follow.

Through online efforts, the College has been able to connect with about one-sixth of its core audience, including alumni, staff, faculty, students and "friends."

The College has more than 20 Facebook pages affiliated with it, ranging from pages for academic departments to different sports teams. Nordin offers workshops titled "The Social Media Hour" for faculty and staff interested in becoming a part of the network on Fridays throughout the semester.

The College also has been branching out to other social networking sites, including Twitter and LinkedIn, as well as exploring new ground with Cappex and Zinch, two social networks geared toward connecting prospective students to colleges.

Hired in Feb. 2010, Nordin's main concentration is to spearhead recruitment efforts beyond simply inciting interest among prospective students, though her efforts do concentrate on that audience as well. She also works to achieve goals like the milestone reached a few weeks ago to recruit more fans and to obtain more "hits."

"Since I'm the first person to hold this position, I can really make it my own, " Nordin said, "I'm planning on doing everything from cradle to grave, so to speak."

Although the College's Facebook page was around prior to the formation of Nordin's position, there has been a noticeable spike in the College's online success and presence since she came to campus.

"Since Daniella arrived, it's been a steady growth," said Dan Forbush, executive director of communications. "We're one of the first colleges to have a social media manager, and, since making that decision, our online ratings have increased."

Forbush said he values social media as a platform for creativity. It can be used to showcase student creativity, and has been through postings of student films, music and photography. Also, the College's current "Creative Thought at Work" campaign originally grew out of a discussion board on the College's Facebook page.

This campaign has since been a recurring theme in communications. "Our goal is to try to generate as much student and alumni content as possible," Forbush said, "You can't fake someone's actual Skidmore experience."

Part of Skidmore's approach to online communications is to ensure there is a personal presence within all of the social media outlets managed by the College. Skidmore was one of the first colleges, Forbush said, to hire a student, Joe Yanks '11, to represent the College on a social media page.

"What we do is try to connect students," Nordin said, "It only makes sense, then, to have there be a presence, not just a social media abyss."

This online human presence manifests as both Nordin herself as well as a staff of student bloggers who answer questions submitted by prospective students. The new Skidmore Student-to-Student program helps put those curious about the college in direct contact with online student ambassadors.

The students also administer the Facebook communities for current students, acting as a live resource for questions to be answered, which Yanks started in 2007. "Why it's so exciting is because it's a whole new way to get a conversation going," Nordin said, "It's a whole new way to actually get a slice of Skidmore life."

"It's great that I get to be a part of something that is already having a successful impact on prospective students," said Emmeline Taylor '14, one of the student social media assistants. "The fact of the matter is that social media is very prevalent amongst the younger generation in our society, and it is how they find out a lot of information. If we can encourage more incredible young minds to look at Skidmore simply because they saw us on a social media site then that is excellent!"

Connecting is the primary reason the College has chosen to focus so intently on social media. "We want to engage our audience," Nordin said, "everyone from alumni to 'friends of the college' who live in Saratoga. It's difficult to pinpoint the payoff, but if there's a student who makes a connection of any sort, that's what I'm interested in."

The connections are also beneficial to the assistants. "My course load is extremely difficult this semester and it has been easy for me to feel disappointed with Skidmore at moments," Taylor said, "But then when I start answering questions for prospective students I realize why I chose to be here in the first place. This job is a great reminder of how lucky I am not only to have the privilege to go to college, but also to have the privilege to go to a college like Skidmore." 

Skidmore graduate murders family before killing himself

Posted by Brendan James

CROSS RIVER — In the midst of a divorce Sam Friedlander, 50, a graduate of Skidmore, fatally beat his wife and shot his two children in Lambert Ridge, an affluent suburb of Cross River, New York, according to police.

A divorce proceeding had been scheduled for this Thursday, according to state police. Friedlander had reportedly been acting differently for weeks and remained living in the same house with his family as his behavior became more erratic.

On Tuesday the bodies of 8-year-old Gregory Friedlander and 10-year-old Molly Friedlander were found in their beds. The children were shot by their father and then placed under the covers. Friedlander's wife Amy had struggled before he bludgeoned her with a leg of furniture on the floor of the master bedroom. Friedlander killed himself with a 12-gauge shotgun in the basement of the house.

A full report may be found at The Saratogian.

EAC composting initiative in Northwoods: Environmental Action Club lessens food waste in student apartments

Posted by Andrew Shi In the spring semester of 2011, Talia Arnow '13, chairwoman of the Environmental Action Club's (EAC) Compost Subcommittee, created the compost initiative, which is now active in the Northwoods apartments.

A food waste audit was conducted in the Murray-Aikins Dining Hall last semester to determine how much food the college wastes on a weekly basis. The results came out to nearly half a ton of wasted food per day in pre- and post-consumer food, totaling 6986.50 pounds in one week. The Compost Subcommittee has now moved the initiative to Northwoods, and hopes to eventually expand the system to the rest of the college.

"The residential composting initiate has been very successful and has met [EAC] expectations," Campus Sustainability Coordinator Riley Neugebauer said.

At the beginning of the semester, each apartment is given one white two-gallon pail, and a pamphlet explaining what can be composted. During the week, residents are expected to put scraps of uneaten food into the bucket and then, when the bucket is full, dump the waste into a larger grey bucket situated outside each building near the laundry room.

Every Friday afternoon, EAC volunteers take these grey buckets to a large, four-part compost bin in Scribner Village. There, the compost is converted through several steps into the fertilizer used for the Student Garden.

The original cost of the compost initiative, Neugebauer said, was approximately $2,200-2,300. These funds were allocated mostly for the purchase of the large compost bin, the smaller buckets, lids, shovels and other tools. However, composting now "costs nothing to maintain per month because it is being handled [by] volunteers in EAC," Neugebauer said.

As to how much the compost initiative has saved the college, "it is not likely to be saving a lot of money currently, if any, because it isn't affecting the number of times that Springer Waster [the company hired to remove the college's waste] has to haul waste offsite from campus as of now," Neugebauer said. The amount of waste composted by Northwoods is, in respect to the total amount of waste by the college, too small to financially benefit it, although not insignificant.

Neugebauer said the current initiative is partially experimental, and, depending on any issues that arise, the project may be expanded to Scribner Housing and further. Neugebauer said that the EAC members will most likely "consider expansion once we are confident that there are enough people to handle the workload, and decide whether another bin is needed to handle the additional waste."

Neugebauer says current Northwoods resident participation in the compost initiative is at 17 percent. She adds that most residents were satisfied and excited about the initiative. Annie Wu '12, a Northwoods resident, agrees with this consensus. "I like the idea of it, but there is a concern that it attracts and breeds flies."

Lids for the buckets were included this semester to help ward off the flies, but this still seems to be an issue that the EAC will have to deal with.

This project is an important step in creating a more environmentally geared and conscious campus, Neugebauer said. "The more we can tie conceptual information from the classroom to real-world projects, the more accessible, practical and possible sustainability will be." Arnow said that she supports all the information provided by Neugebauer, adding that she believes the initiative has been a great success for EAC and volunteers.

Neugebauer said that "it is necessary to look at the larger scope of waste and how we can reduce the waste stream in multiple ways... which in total has the potential to reduce costs and reduce emissions and be more sustainable." The compost system is only one method employed to reduce waste. Students are encouraged to lessen waste in the dining hall, in their apartments and dorms, and to be environmentally mindful every day.

SGA Senate holds elections, discusses Scribner Library renovations

Posted by Ani Lordkipanidze

The SGA Senate had the Willingness-to-Serve elections this week. Students ran for positions on the Speakers Bureau, Club Affairs Committee, Committee on Academic Standing, Class of 2012 Secretary, Class of 2015 Secretary, Integrity Board, Skidmore Shop Advisory Committee and Committee on Academic Freedom and Rights.

Every candidate came to the stage and delivered a brief speech, followed by questions from the audience.

Next followed a conversation with Justin Sipher, chief technology officer, and librarians and architects, who talked about the ongoing renovations to the Lucy Scribner Library. According to them, the changes made in the library were based on students' wishes, such as the café, which was recently incorporated into library.

The changes in the library include additional study rooms, works stations, recording rooms and power outlets. Study rooms will operate on a reserve mechanism, so that students may reserve a study room in advance to guarantee a place to study.

Members of several clubs, who are seeking funds from SGA to sponsor their activities, also presented at the meeting.

Senate meets from 8 to 11 p.m. every Thursday in Ladd Hall 307. 

EAC plans events for Fall 2011 semester: Events involve guest speakers from Green Umbrella and local elections

Posted by Ani Lordkipanidze

Four hundred people are on the mailing list of the club and about 30-40 people generally attend the weekly meetings. The first part of the meetings is devoted to announcements from the clubs leaders and audience members about upcoming events.

After announcements, club members split into four groups to discuss issues concerning real food, transportation motilities, group energy resources and waste products. Discussions involve different projects and solutions to various problems regarding them.

Discussion then moved to the several upcoming events sponsored by the EAC that will take place this semester.

Michelle Madigan, running for Saratoga Springs commissioner of finance in the local elections, will be coming to the EAC meeting next Monday, Oct. 17 to discuss hydrofracking, a drilling process that threatens to contaminate drinking water, public health and habitats.

Green Umbrella is a network of New York youth activists, which aims to create social change by focusing on economical, social and environmental inequalities. The current issue at hand is hydrofracking, which will be discussed at the convergence with the college on Oct. 22.

Finally, on Friday, Nov. 14, the EAC is putting the student garden to bed and cleaning it up until the spring semester.

EAC meets every Monday at 9 p.m. in Ladd 207 to discuss events and issues concerning its involvement on campus.  

Local 291 Union strikes outside of Skidmore College: Workers protest wages and benefits

Posted by Andrew Shi

On Tuesday, Oct. 11, Carpenter Union members from the Local 291 Union picketed the Broadway entrance into the college for a second time.

The union was first seen protesting from approximately 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Thursday, Sept. 22 in the same place. The purpose of this demonstration was to publicize grievances the Local 291 has with Niatrust Drywall Inc., the private corporation contracted to renovate North Woods and to construct housing in Scribner Village.

The benefits Local 291 claims Niatrust is denying its workers include health benefits and pensions, which comes to an average of $15.84 per hour. In addition, Niatrust isn't paying the standard wage ($27.22 per hour) as standardized by the union, picketers say. The New York Department of Labor maintains this wage as standard, but only has the authority to enforce it in public projects.

Todd Banks, representative of Local 291 and leader of the picketing effort, said because Niatrust is a non-area standards contractor, meaning it is not bound to standards embodied by Local 291, it is not only undermining the union's work but is also depriving its employees of benefits and appropriate salaries.

A spokeswoman for  Niatrust defends the company.

While she concedes that Niatrust pays less than the standard wage, she says the company does provide its workers with benefits.  In addition, unlike union workers, she said, employees of Niatrust are at least kept busy and are able to provide for their families. She labels the union's defamation as "propaganda," and claims the union is only "interested in its own coffers."

While Banks said "the carpenters are fighting to maintain and improve the standard of living for all trades people whether or not they are affiliated with a union," the Niatrust spokeswoman believes they are only interested in ascertaining new members and protecting projects they think should be contracted to them, not non-area standards contractors. With a poor economy the union is becoming exacerbated as the members need to pay taxes, she said.

On April 5, the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, the national governing body for all Union carpenters and locals, decided to merge the Empire State Regional Council of Carpenters and the New Jersey Regional Counci of Carpenters into the current entity known as the Northeast Regional Council of Carpenters. As a result, Albany Local 370 and Plattsburgh Local 1042 combined to form Local 291.

This merge upset several of its members who left the union as a result. 

One of these members is Richard Dorrough, who has created a new local union, Carpenters Independent Local One, to compete with Local 291. Dorrough claims that Local 291 holds corrupt and undemocratic practices and is responsible for the mismanagement of funds that led to its losses in the Madoff scandal.

Banks, however, assures that his union is solely focused on protecting and improving the rights and standards of living for all carpenters. He says that Dorrough has no factual evidence to back up his claims, and that he has been known to resort to violence when challenged. "He makes a lot of claims and backs them up with nothing but heresy," he said.

Banks also recognizes that Niatrust is a private company, but disagrees with its noncompliance with the New York Department of Labor's standards. As he justifies it, "same work, same pay."

As of now there has been no compromise or resolution between Niatrust Drywall Inc. and the Local 291 Union. As for further information picketing, Banks said " they do plan additional action at Skidmore as well as various sites where Niatrust and other non-area standards contractors are doing work." No specific dates were given for these events. 

IGR promotes courses for Spring 2012 semester: Interested students attended information sessions this week

Posted by Julia Leef

[Editor: When originally published this article incorrectly stated that the IGR courses would be held in the spring of 2011. They will be held in the spring of 2012. The article has been corrected.]

In the upcoming spring semester, students will be able to register for IGR (Inter-Group Relations) classes, which include four  peer-led dialogues on race. These courses will be administered by Kristie Ford, assistant professor of sociology and IGR Relations program director; Peter McCarthy, field coordinator in social work; Lei Bryant, assistant professor of music; Nate Richardson, residence hall director; and Michael Ennis-McMillan, associate professor of anthropology.

Approximately 15-20 students from a variety of years and majors attended the information session regarding these courses at 7 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 6 in TLC 203. There was another session the previous day at the same time and place. The courses will be capped at 10 students and are peer-led, while the faculty coaches will observe the dialogues and are responsible for grading all student work.

The four courses are composed of two "inter-group" dialogues titled "People of Color" and "White People," and two "intra-group" dialogues, "White Racial Identity" and "Multiracial Identity." They have been offered since the start of the IGR program.

A graduate student at the University of Michigan, while pursuing her doctorate, Ford became involved in an inter-group relations program which has since won several awards. Now, teaching courses in Race & Ethnicity, Gender & Sexuality and Social Justice, Ford brings her experience in IGR to the college.

The IGR program began in 2008 as the result of a sociology course titled "Race and Power" Ford taught. "Students seemed eager to engage in more courses like that," Ford said, "and there weren't a lot of opportunities for dialogue-based learning."

Due to the popularity of the course, Ford said that she was looking to expand the course offerings. "Last semester, we had a wait list of 50 students, and then we stopped counting," she said.

"Race and Power" serves as the first pre-requisite for students training as facilitators. After completing this course, students may then register for "Racial Identity Theory and Praxis," in which they must earn a B or higher to be considered as a candidate for facilitating. "Students talk about it as a transformative experience," Ford said. "We're committed to give everybody who wants to be involved the chance."

"I'm a therapist by trade, and this is the safest, most supportive environment I have ever experienced," McCarthy said in relation to the White Racial Identity group, one of the dialogues offered by IGR. "Open yourself up to learning about yourself. How do you learn about whiteness when whiteness is invisible?" McCarthy also teaches "Practicum and Facilitating," a course that facilitators take while involved in a dialogue.

Peer facilitators Josi Orlandella '14, Kali Block-Steele '13 and Regina Ellis '13 spoke about their experiences through IGR courses at the college. "I have less fear of bringing up race outside of the classroom," said Orlandella, "where in the past, I felt I did not have the knowledge or ability to do so."

According to Ford, the main goal for the year is to train more faculty, staff and students to expand the IGR program. There are currently a total of 40 spots available for students for the spring dialogues. The IGR program also offers annual faculty and staff workshops for those who are interested in becoming IGR "coaches."

"It connects to the college's strategic plan of intercultural and global understanding," Ford said.

Ford publishes about the progress of the college's IGR program in academic research journals, which have been used as models for other institutions. She has traveled to other colleges to consult with them about starting their own IGR programs.