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Transgender Day of Remembrance Gathering Wednesday Nov 20Contributed by Luca Maurer on 11/17/19 Please join us for a Transgender Day of Remembrance Gathering to honor and mourn transgender and gender non-conforming people whose lives have been lost to violence this past year in the US. It will take place on Wednesday November 20 in Muller Chapel. It will begin at 12:15 PM and end at 12:50 PM. Read more . . . (107 words) English Majors are Finalists for Pop Culture PrizeContributed by Katharine Kittredge on 11/17/19 Andrea Yzaguirre and Charlotte Kane, both senior English majors, are finalists for the top undergraduate award presented by the Mid-Atlantic Popular Culture Conference in 2021.
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Eight IC students presented their original research at the Mid-Atlantic Popular and American Culture Association’s annual conference on November 7-9.
Read more . . . (184 words) The Fitness Center will be operating with reduced hours over Thanksgiving Break. Our hours of operation will be: Friday 11/22: 7:00am - 2:00pm Saturday 11/23 - Sunday 11/24: CLOSED Monday 11/25: 11:00am - 2:00pm Tuesday 11/26: 11:00am - 2:00pm Wednesday 11/27 - Sunday 12/1: CLOSED We will reopen with our regular academic year hours on Monday 12/2/19. Read more . . . (26 words) Gordon Rowland presents at Relating Systems Thinking and Design conference in Chicago.Contributed by Colette Matisco on 11/17/19 Gordon Rowland, Director of the Center for Faculty Excellence, presented at the Relating Systems Thinking and Design (RSD8) conference at the Illinois Institute of Design in Chicago. His talk was titled, “Developing Systemic Design Tools,” and he introduced a model of planned change in organizations that he developed in his work as a CFE faculty member in residence from 2014 to 2017. A total of 45,161 fans were on hand to watch Ithaca College defeat SUNY Cortland 32-20 in the 2019 Cortaca Jug game on Saturday, November 16, setting a new all-time record for a Division III football game. It was the 61st time that Ithaca and Cortland have played for the Cortaca Jug, in what Sports Illustrated once referred to as “the biggest little game in the nation.” Read more . . . (113 words) Join IABC in the Klingenstein lounge for The Candidate Program on Wednesday, November 20th, 7-9pm. for SLI and Career Connections Credit! Be sure to sign up today!! https://ithaca.campuslabs.com/engage/event/5149334
Read more . . . (131 words) Come talk about how film can work as a kind of religion all by itself, and also how visual techniques can communicate religious meaning. Read more . . . (147 words) Often called the invisible killer, carbon monoxide is an odorless, colorless gas created when fuels (such as gasoline, wood, coal, natural gas, propane, oil, and methane) burn incompletely. In the home, heating and cooking equipment that burn fuel can be sources of carbon monoxide. Read more . . . (572 words) Residential Life and Judicial Affairs Welcomes Katie Newcomb!Contributed by Colleen Barnes on 11/15/19 Contributed on behalf of Marsha Dawson, Director, Residential Life and Judicial Affairs. Residential Life and Judicial Affairs is excited to announce that Katie Newcomb will join our team on Wednesday, November 20th as the Assistant Director of Judicial Affairs. As Assistant Director, Katie will be responsible for overseeing the College wide judicial system and coordinating all related processes and functions. Read more . . . (142 words) EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY ONLINE WINTER 2020 SESSION. Sign up now!Contributed by Christine Hafer on 11/15/19
Take Educational Psychology ONLINE through Ithaca College during the WINTER 2020 SESSION (January 6 - 17, 2020) FROM HOME! Educational Psychology explores the study of human development from infancy through adolescence, including cognitive and behavioral approaches to learning in the context of school and other instructional situations. This course is required for the Education Studies Minor and the Teacher Education preparation track. To enroll, search course number EDUC 21010 01: Educational Psychology for WINTER 2020 term on Homerconnect. Online registration will remain open for add/drop by matriculated students until 11:59 pm January 6, 2020. A 30% tuition discount is applied to winter session undergraduate tuition charges. Contact Dr. Christine Havens-Hafer at chavenshafer@ithaca.edu for more information about the course. EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY ONLINE WINTER 2020 SESSION. Sign up now!Contributed by Christine Hafer on 11/15/19 Take Educational Psychology ONLINE through Ithaca College during the WINTER 2020 SESSION (January 6 - 17, 2020) FROM HOME! Educational Psychology explores the study of human development from infancy through adolescence, including cognitive and behavioral approaches to learning in the context of school and other instructional situations. This course is required for the Education Studies Minor and the Teacher Education preparation track. To enroll, search course number EDUC 21010 01: Educational Psychology for WINTER 2020 term on Homerconnect. Online registration will remain open for add/drop by matriculated students until 11:59 pm January 6, 2020. A 30% tuition discount is applied to winter session undergraduate tuition charges. Contact Dr. Christine Havens-Hafer at chavenshafer@ithaca.edu for more information about the course. The following History courses have seats: Read more . . . (46 words) Sigma Tau Delta Faculty Speaker Series, Nov 20, 2019: Dr. Dyani Taff on Racialized Environments in Early Modern Culture,Contributed by Christopher Matusiak on 11/15/19 All are welcome to attend the following public lecture on Wednesday, November 20, at 5:30 in Business 206 "Rocks and Hard Places: Scylla and Charybdis, Wombs/Tombs, and Racialized Environments in Early Modern Culture" How are the classical sea monsters Scylla and Charybdis racialized, and what are their genders? Dr Dyani Taff's talk will offer a few answers, examining early modern ideas about monstrosity, nature, and human-nonhuman interactions in a variety of early modern texts. Edmund Spenser's The Faerie Queene, book 2 and Hester Pulter's "The Complaint of the Thames, 1647," poems written half a century apart and in radically differing political climates, will serve as core examples. Spenser and Pulter offer radical rewritings of the classical story that make violent monsters into agents of political and personal change and that invite questions about the supposed naturalness of 16th and 17th century hierarchies of race and gender. Read more . . . (34 words) Try a History course! The following courses have available seats: Read more . . . (35 words) The School of Music welcomes this year's Louis K. Thaler Concert Violinist Read more . . . (102 words) M-Lot (A&E) and C-Lot (between A&E and Garden Apartments) Closed Saturday November 16th Through Sunday November 17thContributed by Carl Cohen on 11/15/19 In order to provide parking for operational and attendee needs for the Bob Dylan Concert, M-Lot (A&E) and C-Lot (between A&E and Garden Apartments) will be closed from 7AM on Saturday November 16th until the concert ends on Sunday, November 17th.
Read more . . . (33 words) Need to study a language? How about taking Latin 102? Elementary Latin II is being offered in the Spring on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 2:35-3:50. The course can be used for the Identities theme. Read about the myths of ancient Rome in the original language. Improve your English vocabulary. Latin will help HSHP students and Pre-law students understand their specialized vocabulary.
Read more . . . (56 words) Need to study a language? How about taking Latin 102? Elementary Latin II is being offered in the Spring on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 2:35-3:50. The course can be used for the Identities theme. Read about the myths of ancient Rome in the original language. Improve your English vocabulary. Latin will help HSHP students and Pre-law students understand their specialized vocabulary. Read more . . . (51 words) Community-based play about climate change, "The Next Storm", presented by Civic Ensemble and Cornell PMA, November 15-16 and 22-23Contributed by Rachel Gould on 11/14/19 The Next Storm is a dark and humorous look at the impact that the climate crisis has had on our community. Set in the not-so-distant-future, our story follows an ensemble of characters as they face the struggle between apathy, anger, and action. Who’s gets to decide the course forward and what are we willing to sacrifice? What happens when students and bureaucrats, parents and developers, idealists and realist come head to head over the best course toward climate resiliency? Read more . . . (226 words) |
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