Response System Upgrade Set
Transcription
Response System Upgrade Set
www.tompkinsweekly.com Locally Owned & Operated Your source for local news & events School board hopefuls discuss ICSD issues page 2 Principal is one tough act to follow ..................page 3 Commons gathering targets poverty ....................page 4 Students think locally and globally ..................page 5 Tree nursery takes root in Dryden..........................page 6 Opinion and letters page 8 She’s got her finger on Caroline’s pulse ......page 10 Dramatizing an age-old debate ..............................page 13 FREE Response System Upgrade Set By Mike Levy Tompkins County is one step closer to completing its new emergency response system. Lee Shurtleff, director of emergency response, has recommended that the county use a balance in the $2 million capital project to fund radio equipment that agencies throughout the county will use to connect to the system. His move, once approved by the County Legislature’s Public Safety Committee, will allow testing of the system and an eventual unveiling by this fall. “It’s the last major piece in the puzzle,” says Shurtleff. “Part of the problem has been that it’s such a major expense for everyone involved. There are some small departments out there that would have a challenge having to buy and replace their equipment all at once.” For their communications gear to be compatible with the county’s new 800-watt emergency system, all county fire, emergency and medical service and law enforcement agencies must replace their mobile radios and control station equipment. While municipalities often borrow money for capital expenditures, Shurtleff says the nature of this equipment makes that impossible. Daily use and changing technology force agencies to replace equipment often, so the only choice is to pay for them now. “They’re used in some tough environments,” says Shurtleff. “Technology does change, and everything today is softwaredriven, so there comes a point where [the equipment] is no longer supported and you move on to the next generation of systems.” “The way we’ve been able to put this together has saved us from having any one department or one entity being forced to borrow money or put in huge sums up front,” says Shurtleff. “That was a fear at one point. Being able to do this all in one basic package, we can move the users onto the system rather quickly.” departments Individual will be responsible for maintenance and replacement of their equipment from this point onward. The county was able to offer a solution to the upgrade problem thanks to Photo by Kathy Morris ALSO IN THIS ISSUE… Volume 1, No. 30 • May- 7-13, 2007 Lee Shurtleff, director of Emergency Response for the county, with the radio transmitting equipment for the new communications system housed at 92 Brown Road. the efficiency of the project, which county public information officer Marcia Lynch calls the largest capital project in the county’s history. “It’s been managed so well that there’s about $2 million that’s projected to be left over,” says Lynch. Other project funds were two through secured $500,000 grants obtained by congressmen Sherwood Boehlert and Maurice Hinchey, as well as another $80,000 in funding obtained by State Sen. James Seward. Construction of the new system puts the county in compliance with federal standards for interoperability — the current buzz word meaning communications among departments. “It’s a federal priority, even more so a mandate now, after the World Trade Center event and other events where the responders were on different radio frequencies,” Shurtleff explains. “That’s been a goal of ours — to get on the Please turn to page 20 Kerrigan Gets Nod for City Judge By Nathan Dougherty There will be a new face behind the bench in Ithaca. James Local lawyer Kerrigan has been selected as the part-time city judge following a month-long search process and a final vote delayed by a 90-minute executive session of common council. Kerrigan was chosen from among two other finalists. Marjorie Olds, the former city court judge, and local attorney Pamela Bleiwas were also considered. Before the meeting, several members of the audience spoke in favor of Olds, who had run the city’s drug court during her time as judge. Mayor Caroline Peterson says the decision did not come easily, and was influenced in part by the decision of full-time judge Judith Rossiter. “For many reasons, I’ve taken in consideration a great deal of material and I have to the ability my best of researched and examined items brought to me, things I’ve heard and phone calls made to me and by me regarding the decision,” Peterson says. “With my belief of the shift of certain duties that appears to be the intention of the fulltime judge, I decided to offer James Kerrigan for consideration.” $54,000 salary, had been vacant since April 5, when Olds’ six-year term expired. Peterson called on a committee of common council members to interview candidates and help select “Judges are paid by the state, not the city, so this appointment is an unusual situation in my opiniuon.” - Carolyn Peterson Eight common council members voted for with Robin Kerrigan, Korherr (D-Ward 5) recusing herself because of conflicts with the sheriff ’s office and Maria Coles (DWard 1) abstaining. Coles says she respects the mayor’s selection process, but believes Peterson made the wrong decision. “I know an excruciating what process it’s been and I don’t want my vote to become a reflection against the person who’s been appointed,” Coles says. “My conscience tells me the right person was not picked.” Selection Process The position, with its finalists. Because the position is filled by mayoral appointment once every six years, Peterson and the current council members are new to the process. “None of us in office have worked on a judge appointment, so I am literally taking the act at face value and asked common council to help guide selection process,” Peterson said earlier in the process. Olds, who was appointed to the position in 1995 and again in 2001, says she underwent different evaluations each time. The first appointment, by former mayor Ben Nichols, included a committee of lawyers and community members who interviewed her and helped make the selection. The second, made by former mayor Alan Cohen, was an appointment without an interview. Because of the current administration’s inexperience in this area, one of the first acts the committee took during the process was to educate itself on the judge’s duties and to determine what questions could be asked of candidates. “We held a learning session to understand how the courts work, because this is the one and only time I as mayor do something with the courts,” Peterson says. “Otherwise we don’t manage the courts. Judges are paid by the state, not the city, so this appointment is an unusual situation in my opinion.” Peterson faced some criticism for what was perceived as a closed process, but she said it would be unfair to release the names of all applicants and allow the decision to turn into a public popularity contest. Members of the committee backed her intentions, Please turn to page 20 5 Candidates Vie for School Board By Glynis Hart Both incumbents and newcomers are competing for four Ithaca school board seats in the election coming up on May 15. Driven by a sense of civic duty, the candidates will find their reward in an unpaid position that involves three or four meetings a week, endless committee sitting, and an education in itself concerning how the Ithaca City School District is run. Judith Maxwell, who has been on the board for three years after 34 years as a teacher, says that after a career in the classroom she’s well prepared for the school board. “I thought I would know a lot, but the learning curve on the board is very steep,” she says. “There’s a lot of information to master.” Maxwell emphasizes three critical issues confronting the district: equity, finances and maintaining the buildings. “We should not have had to have such a big bond [due to maintenance issues], but we put off smaller bondings until now,” she says, adding that Ithaca has a small tax base yet loses state and federal funding because it’s listed as a high-income area. 2 Tompkins Weekly May 7 Having taught in Caroline Elementary, the old and new Central Schools, Belle Sherman and Boynton, Maxwell is concerned that students in lowincome areas aren’t getting the support they need. “My big interest in equity is in literacy. If every kid can read we’re not going to have the achievement gap we have now.” Elizabeth Kunz is the parent of a third-grader at Beverly J. Martin School and president of the school’s PTA. “We need to compensate for the inequities kids face outside school by adjusting the curriculum, having smaller class sizes and by having a curriculum that’s more approachable,” she says. Kunz cites the equity issue as one that has the most resonance for her. “Equity is first and foremost. The district is not doing a good job giving everyone an equal opportunity,” she says. Although the playing field outside the schools is not level for all kids, within the schools there’s an opportunity to counteract that, she contends. “Six hours is a huge part of their day. They take the school home with them.” Robert DeLuca, the current board president, is running for a second three-year term. Citing a 30-year career in public service, including serving as commissioner of mental health for Tompkins County, DeLuca is most interested in the equity goals. “Public schools enable the existence of a fair, free and democratic society,” he says. “A quality education is the right of all citizens. We ask the school district to find, with community partners, strategies that mitigate the effects of poverty, historical racism and the challenges of disabilities so that these factors are no longer determining variables of academic and co-curricular performance.” DeLuca also has an interest in following through with the extensive facilities bond project the board sent to voters. “I want to help shepherd these projects to fruition. This will require the board funding essential programs carefully while looking for effective programs and efficiencies to offset additional taxes from the bond.” Bradley Grainger, who has served as a volunteer (unelected) on the district’s audit committee, cites a high level of involvement with school issues and feels it is time to do take his turn on the school board. “I’ve been involved in various things in the district for years. Part of my running for the board is the sense that it’s time to get on the other side of the table,” he says. “It’s easy to decide what to do if you’re sitting in the audience.” Grainger has a global interest in school issues but also offers his background in construction lending. “I work in finance and lending and I bring skills as far as overseeing the facilities bond issues,” he says. Robert Ainslie grew up on a dairy farm in Enfield and graduated from Ithaca High in the class of 1974. He was captain of the football team and went on to play football for Cornell. After many years of farming, Ainslie is a financial advisor with Merrill Lynch. “I publicly and actively worked for the bond,” he says. “I want to make sure that the process is done correctly and equitably. None of the projects are etched in stone. Decisions still need to be made.” Please turn to page 18 Lansing Loses a Popular Principal As Earlene Carr leaves her job as principal at the R.C. Buckley Elementary School in Lansing this summer, her legacy might be hard to pin down. She is described as a dynamo, a people person and an energetic supporter of teachers and kids who is witty, charming, stylish and focused. She favors words like “exhilarating,” “exciting” and “proud,” perhaps a reflection of the values and spirit that others say she has brought to the school. And she likes to laugh. “If you can’t laugh, then it’s a dull day. It makes difficult things a little more palatable,” says Carr. Still, her morning mantra, issued in early announcements day after day, might be among her most enduring contributions. “Remember, kids,” Carr would say over the loudspeaker system. “It’s cold outside. Please dress in layers today.” It became an in-joke, Lansing Mark Lewis superintendent explains. “She said it so many times, the kids really got the message, but we kind of tease her about it.” Maybe, for all that, the last day of school this year should be “Dress In Layers Day,” as a tribute to a the interim principal who couldn’t seem to find an exit, stayed three years and made an impression on everybody. This was, in fact, one of those reports where you had to ask, “What’s the funniest Ms. Carr moment you remember?” But there were so many they seemed to collapse into a Ms. Carr blur. She could keep the school board in pitched laughter throughout her Photo provided By Anthony Hall Earlene Carr reports on the school, pausing in the patter to make sure, with great emphasis, that teachers and kids got the praise she felt they deserved. In faculty meetings, irrepressible and inimitable, “She keeps things lively and moving, and her wit definitely comes out,” says third-grade teacher Sherry Williams, who has been with the district for 23 years. As experienced as that seems, when Williams was considering a move from second to third grades a few years ago, looping for a year (staying with the same kids) to make the transition, it was a difficult, personal decision to make, she recalls. “It was something I wrestled with. Did I really want to do that? Ms. Carr made me feel the positives of that. She was extremely supportive, and helped me come to a decision,” saya Williams, who made the transition successfully. Art teacher Jessica Stratton saya Carr is extremely supportive of the school’s art program, arranging at Moms Love Ice Cream Cakes, Purity Gifts, 36 favorite Purity flavors, Sensational Sundaes, Milkshakes, Gourmet Chocolate Truffles Open Daily 272-1545 Rt. 13, Ithaca www.purityicecream.com one point to have size-appropriate tables delivered to the art room. But then, Stratton says that Carr quickly decided, all in fun, that the art teacher was suffering from a “Cinderella complex” because she had to have the right tables. In return, Stratton, who also started at Lansing three years ago, begged Carr to stay on board. In fact, the elementary school art show will be a dedication to Carr’s departure at the end of the year. It is a surprise event “with adorable drawings the kids all made for her,” Stratton says. “And she could be an art teacher with those beautiful clothes she wears,” Stratton adds. Her emphasis on art, theater and music were meant, “to level the playing field for a lot of kids,” Carr says. As an interim principal, Carr seemed caught in a time loop, or a Groundhog’s Day scenario at Lansing, staying on year after year to maintain some stability in a district that was having trouble keeping administrators on board. In the past five years there have been five changes in the superintendent’s office and four different elementary school principals, including Carr. Every year, with departures at the top, the school board asked Carr to stay. With some stability in hand, the district announced that Chris Pettograsso, the director of curriculum and professional development at the Watkins Glenn Central School District, would take over as principal on July 1. “Well, you know what? There comes a time to depart and a time to ride your charger out, so that you don’t have to ride the junk wagon out,” says Carr. Carr, in her fashion, “has been extremely welcoming to me and has already included me on some decision making at Lansing,” Pettograsso says. Lewis is excited about the new principal. “She comes extremely well recommended from the people at Watkins Glenn,” he says. But everyone acknowledges that Carr is a tough act to follow. Everyone, that is, except for Carr herself. “It’s been exhilarating and a lot of fun, seeing kids progress and grow,” says Carr, who grew up in Pennsylvania, went to Penn State and began teaching second grade in East Orange, N.J. When she moved to New York, she subbed in Ithaca, taught reading in Dryden and then became the K-3 principal there. When she retired, her career seemed only to begin again, including several interim positions in Ithaca before coming to Lansing. She is at the point now where you want to ask, like a baseball player often traded, which uniform she would like to pose in for her plaque in the hall of fame. But she says the R.C. Buckley Elementary School was already a gem before she got there. “I’ve had such a rewarding experience here, and such cooperation with staff and between staff,” she says. “But you know, I’m gracious about the fact that I really didn’t do anything. I just came in here and tried to lead these things on because they were already here. I just tried to make sure they were in place a little tighter, but the essence was already here.” Fun & Sun! Make your cookouts easy & fun with grills by... Sample our live grilling demos at lunch each Saturday in May May is National Bar-B-Que Month Featuring a display of our various grills, fire-pits and fire-bowls. Hearth & Home All are available fully assembled 273-3012 • M-F 8-5, Sat 9-4 www.hearthhome.com 726 West Court Street & Route 13 South, Ithaca Tompkins Weekly May 7 3 Concert Highlights Local Poverty Issue The fickle spring weather held out for Ithaca’s first “Rock Against Poverty” concert on the Commons, an event highlighting a problem throughout the county and sponsored by the Tompkins County Worker’s Center, Alternatives Federal Credit Union, Neighborhood Legal Services, Loaves and Fishes, Model Citizen, Beyond the Wall and a slew of Ithaca College organizations. “Turnout is OK,” says IC junior and member of Students for Economic Equality Dan Carrion during the gathering held on Sunday, April 29. “We are getting a lot of foot traffic and raising [the walkers’] awareness, which is the most important thing.” The event featured live music and speakers throughout the day. Dozens of event volunteers, adorned in spray painted T-shirts, buzzed around the Bernie Milton Pavilion making posters and answering questions. Placards were designed to capture the attention of passersby with factoids like “1 in 8 children in Tompkins County lives in poverty” and “Sustainability is the opposite of poverty,” written in bright neon paint. Event organizer Pete Meyers expresses pride in the volunteers’ efforts. “The idea of college students taking a role in the community is always good and, unfortunately, relatively rare,” he says. “I am proud this was their expression on how to end poverty.” Musicians included Ayurveda, Jimkata, and Adam Day. The music spanned genres with pop-acoustic Photo by Andres Perez-Charneco By Andres Perez-Charneco Kendra Lynn, left, a senior at Ithaca College, was among the student volunteers making signs for both the anti-poverty and immigrants rights rallies. guitar, R & B, hip-hop and blues-rock filling the air. Music coordinator Christian Debrigard, an IC senior, proposed the idea of a benefit through his role in the Ithaca Achievement Program, a multicultural scholars effort. “[I] wanted the music to appeal to the diversity of the audience walking on the Commons,” says Debrigard. “A concert on the Commons gets a lot more people than a benefit event at a club.” The gathering also included a donation drive to benefit Sarah Carthon, a local woman raising her six grandchildren alone, a crafts table, spontaneous sidewalk art and the aforementioned awareness campaign. “Awareness is my key focus as it must come before anything else and before true change can occur,” says Melanie Serrou, an IC sociology Trumansburg Optical Neil Henninger, O.D. Full Service Eye Care Now Available... Providing optical services for patients of all ages, contact lens services, and a wide selection of frames and accessories. Please call for an appointment 607-387-7327 79 East Main Street (Rte. 96), Trumansburg 4 Tompkins Weekly May 7 major, intern at the Worker’s Center and member of SEE-IC. Organizers emphasized the differences between urban and rural poverty, the latter being of greatest concern in Tompkins County. “In a bigger city, poverty is a lot more in your face,” says Meyers, who then cites the limited public transportation options in this area, which forces all to buy or rely on a car, as an example of the difference between the two classes of poverty. But Meyers also lauded the availability of human services organizations within the county, which help the poor get back on their feet. While the event raised $1,011 through donations, 75 percent of which will go to Carthon and 25 percent will go to the Worker’s Center, Serrou reiterates the educational goal. “That is not to say that we want to say that charity is the answer to poverty and our goal for the concert, because it is not.” Instead, she says, the concert emphasized the adoption of a living wage by all county employers. The living wage for a single person in Tompkins County is $20,450 a year, roughly $9.83 per hour with employer-sponsored health care. Without healthcare, the county living wages jumps to $11.18 per hour. “We are trying to get people who work and aren’t on a living wage angry enough that they begin to ask for it,” says Meyers, summarizing the main point of his speech to the audience. He challenged local big businesses to pay their employers a living wage since the smaller, local competition could. Carthon and Serrou also spoke, relating their own experience as a single mother and a student working her way through college, respectively, to their efforts in combating poverty. Serrou dismissed the catcalls of sporadic naysayers who claimed the event did little to actually combat county poverty. “If [the concert] makes a difference in at least one person’s life then that is what is important. I know it will make a difference to Sarah [Carthon] and already has,” she says. The Tompkins County Worker’s Center also sponsored a May 1 Immigrants Rights rally on the Commons. While organizers agreed that issues of immigration (legal and illegal) relate to poverty, the events were not related. “They are not really meant to play off one another, though they do nicely,” says Serrou. By Sue Henninger What are the youth of Trumansburg and Ulysses up to? Elementary school students recently completed their first “Math-AThon.” Principal Carolyn Lange notes that the students kicked off the event with a Family Festival night, featuring literacy activities, a family wellness area and math games such as an “estimation station” and a replica store. The Math-A-Thon involved discovering how many math problems elementary students could solve in a week. Kindergartners through fourth-graders were offered a variety of sheets of math problems, ranging from simple to more complex, to fill out at whatever pace they chose. Lange states that the response was “amazing” and that she did not anticipate the level of excitement that built around the event as the week went on. “We worked our fingers to the bone, getting teams of parents to come in to correct and count the sheets in the morning and afternoon so we could give the kids the total number of problems solved each day”, she says. Lange also notes that students initiated much of the math-related activities, arriving early and staying after school to pick up extra sheets. Suzanne Kuntz of the Family Math Partnership agrees that the “kids were going wild,” especially upon learning that the grand total of problems solved all week was 51,129. Kuntz, whose goal is to encourage math literacy in students of all ages, believes that the event was successful because, “There were so many different types of math problems offered that students could choose a comfortable level to practice their math skills at and thus become excited, rather than frustrated, about doing the problems.” Many feel that skateboarding is so the local an artform, Conservatory of Fine Arts was an appropriate venue for boarders and their supporters to hold a “Celebration and Rally.” Skateboarding Information, food, live music and a number of raffles, including one for a year of homemade pies and one for a discounted tattoo from Sacred Art in Cortland, were offered all day. There were also photos of local skateboarders Luke Thomas, Sawyer Fritz, Jake McClain, Tyler Higbee and Matt King in action. The photos were taken by Alan Thomas using a special camera lens and displayed throughout the conservatory. A Powerpoint presentation highlighting the Skate Park Committee’s activities was also presented, along with a video of Mack Zaharis, one of the group’s original members. Event organizers Kim Boland and Mary Bouchard report that attendance was steady, with people coming and going all day. Bouchard adds that although she invited village and town officials, because “they say that they want to learn more about the Skate Park and we had lots of educational materials, pictures and videos here”, only town board member Roxanne Merino attended. Debbie Thomas feels that the event was successful as a number of donations and suggestions were received. To learn more about the project visit www.kaboom.org/tburgskatepark. On a global level, the high school Model United Nations and Amnesty International clubs recently returned from a “Get on the Bus” day in New York City. The GOTB Web site (www.gotb.org) describes the 12th annual event as “one full day of human rights action and education.” The first GOTB trip was offered in 1996 and it has continued to grow each year, both in size and scope of activity. The success is primarily due to “young people who feel that they can make the world a better place through learning about global issues and injustices and speaking out about them,” the organization states. For some students, this was their first time to make the trip, while others, like John Murphy, Jake Sheavly and Kim Hall, have done it for several years. Hannah Parker-Carver says that she has attended similar gatherings with her family and that she plans to continue her activism as an adult. The day begins with either a guided tour of the United Nations or listening to human rights speakers such as Margaret Satterthwaite, co-director of the International Human Rights Clinic and one of the faculty directors of the Center for Human Rights and Photo by Kathy Morris Youth Think, Act Locally and Globally Kimbly Boland, Trumansburg Skate Park Committee member, displays the logo on skate park T-shirts and hoodies that were for sale at the Skate Park Celebration and Rally at the Trumansburg Conservatory of Fine Arts. Global Justice at New York University’s School of Law. The students found that Adriana PortilloBartow, a survivor of the war in Guatemala and also one of the plaintiffs in a lawsuit filed in Spanish courts against Rios Montt and other military and government officials, to be an effective speaker. Later, the Amnesty and Model UN groups, along with students from throughout the Northeast, participated in demonstrations for Please turn to page 20 Tompkins Weekly May 7 5 Innovative Tree Nursery Takes Root On Route 13 in Dryden, hoop greenhouses are springing up on 159 acres where RPM Ecosystems is building its first growing center, a nursery specializing in native hardwood trees. RPM stands for root production method, the company’s proprietary and innovative technology that accelerates growth rates and survivability of many plant species but whose biggest promise lies in forestry restoration and conservation. Spokesperson Leslie Carrere says the Dryden site will be the new company’s international headquarters. “There will be different centers built in the future, but this will be the main campus, the main center, and within this center there will also be an educational center.” RPM Ecosystems seems to be everywhere at once. They supplied shade for Al Gore at an April Enviro-fair in Buffalo. In December they delivered live oak trees to New Orleans, which should be full-grown in 20 years instead of the usual 60, much to the delight of folks who thought they’d never see live oaks again in their neighborhoods battered by Hurricane Katrina. Even the oaks of Central Park in New York City are getting help. Wayne Lovelace, a Missouri nurseryman, invented the RPM system 20 years ago, gathering seeds within 200 miles of the target site. Lovelace found that his method of greenhouse nutrition, husbandry and air pruning of roots resulted in a root biomass 18 6 Tompkins Weekly May 7 Photo by Tina Wright By Tina Wright Wayne Lovelace, inventor of the RPM system, with some of his large three-year-old oaks. times that of conventional trees, which is especially helpful with native hardwoods that are difficult to transplant, With no genetic modification and all natural selection, the RPM process claims 90 percent survivability and something close to magical growth rates in trees, even after transplant, three times faster than conventional trees. A 20 year-old oak started the RPM way is as big as a 60 year-old conventional oak. You can use 50 RPM transplants or 400 to 500 bare-root trees to get the same forest canopy, according to company studies. Marvin and P.J. Marshall of Toronto formed a partnership with Wayne and Judy Lovelace and their Forest Keeling nursery in Missouri. Now Ithacans, the Marshalls plan to build a house on the Dryden site in the future. Tom Atkins and Laurie Bethke, directors of nursery and field operations, relocated from Missouri to get the new nursery up and running. With a basic staff of 12 and others being hired for the growing season, Carrere says, “Things are well underway. Our pretty seedlings are already upsizing to the milk carton stage. We will ship 500,000 trees this year.” RPM plans to double tree production next year and get to about 50 employees during the busiest time. Part of their farm is on wetlands, and Virgil Creek runs through the property. Carrere says, “We want to use our wetlands as an educational demonstration as well. We plan to restore them, clear out a lot of the invasive species and replant them in a way that really is a showcase for how to restore a wetland to its best state possible.” “Our main mission is wholesale restoration conservation efforts,” she explains. “And we’re involved with many different kinds of projects right now, from the Mississippi and Louisiana coasts, to the Mohawk River Valley, to putting back trees in Central Park that can adapt to the conditions there. A lot of the challenge in restoration is survival in difficult conditions.” Clearly, RPM feels it has the key to tree and forest survival and rapid restoration. Their trees are framing large-scale restoration projects by park systems, cities and agencies like the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and Soil and Water Conservation. Moving from global to local, RPM is selling six trees to local people this spring: the Big Red oak, pin oak, swamp white oak, sugar maple and red maple. The company is located at 2150 Dryden Road (Route 13) near George Road. The Big Red Oak campaign started with 5,000 acorns collected from Cornell’s grounds. RPM is growing the Big Red trees for sale to the Cornell community, and this project will fund improvements at the Cornell Plantations. Ithaca City forester Andy Hillman was first exposed to RPM 10 years ago in Missouri when he visited the nursery there. “I saw Please turn to page 20 Moving Around Town Gets Greener By Jennifer Dotson This is the latest installment in our Signs of Sustainability series. Any way you go, there are more and sustainable, low-carbon more for getting around options Tompkins County. Click on your bike helmet, lace your shoes, buckle your seatbelt, flash your bus pass (or $1.50) and you’ll travel in good company. Not to mention you’ll avoid construction-related backups. Hoof It Walking in Ithaca should get easier with the city’s new and dedicated sidewalk crew. Lynne Yost of the engineer’s office says a first focus is new walkways along Elmira Road/Route 13 south. City code requires property owners to clear sidewalks of snow, ice and other obstructions. Several city departments, including public works, building and police, work to keep walks clear of summer obstructions such as bushes, trash and parked cars. On the Bus By fall, there will be six 40 percent more efficient hybrid TCAT buses. Soy-based fuel will power the fleet: 200,000 gallons of B5 biodiesel. Semester and summer youth passes make the bus more affordable, either a $30 five-month semester pass or all three summer months for $50. Updated schedules and construction routes are at www.tcatbus.com, or call 277-7433 (weekdays). Pedal Power Those who are ready for the wind rushing past on a bike should be sure to check their equipment before pedaling away. Recycle Ithaca’s Bicycles (RIBs) shares tools and skills to get that bike that’s been parked in the basement or garage rideable. Newly settled in a repurposed brick pumping station at Buffalo and Meadow streets, the Southside Community offsite Center program is open Thursdays from 5 to 8 p.m. and Saturdays from noon to 3 p.m. Open shop has been a mainstay for RIBs, staffed by volunteers with bike repair experience. No cash is needed; the RIBs economy works in volunteer hours. Parts, time using tools and even complete bicycles are “paid” in time. Volunteers don’t need bike repair skills, as RIBs outfits the new space and labor of all kinds is welcome. More information and a wish list are at ribs.velonet.org (shop phone 2565355). Valet bike parking will return for a third year at the Ithaca Festival on Sunday, June 3, at Stewart Park, providing secure parking for those cycling to the park. Look for details in Festival materials. To volunteer, contact Jennifer Dotson at jennifer@ithacacarshare.com. Ten Miles on a Trail Can you imagine walking from Trumansburg to Ithaca? The Black Diamond Trail Enthusiasts Network (BDTEN) can. A March 31 workday drew 38 people for trail maintenance. New York State is planning further trail construction, and BDTEN organizer Jan Zeserson expects a public hearing on the trail master plan this summer. “It’s critical that trail enthusiasts show up in large numbers to register their support,” she says. For details contact zeserson@cornell.edu. The Cayuga Waterfront Trail has a new trailhead at the Ithaca Farmers’ Market, and soon another will be established west of Taughannock Boulevard on Buffalo Street in Ithaca. Waterfront history kiosks near benches make these good spots for a rest during a walk or ride (www.cayugawaterfronttrail.org). Baby, You Can Drive My Car Tompkins Weekly readers are well aware that the county extends beyond the city limits, and some trips are easiest by car. Ithaca Carshare continues to work toward local carsharing. Members will have convenient access to wellmaintained cars and avoid the unpredictable expenses and hassles of car ownership. Plans call for cars in convenient locations downtown, in residential neighborhoods and on the Cornell and Ithaca College campuses by year’s end. Members will reserve the cars by internet or phone, then use an Ithaca Carshare key fob to get in and drive off, paying by the hour and mile. Studies show that carshares save users money and reduce the environmental impacts of driving. Find a car cost calculator at www.ithacacarshare.org. Jennifer Dotson is Ithaca Carshare’s executive director, and works with the city’s Bicycle/ Pedestrian Advocacy Council (bpac.rockwren.us/wiki) and many other groups on sustainable transportation. Help Sought in Monitoring Streams Throughout Tompkins County and into adjacent counties, volunteers play an important role monitoring water quality in local streams flowing into Cayuga Lake. The Community Science Institute and Cornell Cooperative Extension of Tompkins County will offer an orientation for those interested in joining a volunteer monitoring group on Wednesday, May 23, from 6 to 8 p.m. Participants will learn about the role of monitoring in protecting water quality, sampling techniques, how to make sense of the data and how to join a volunteer group mon- itoring water quality in the Cayuga Inlet, Fall, Salmon, Six Mile, Taughannock,and Trumansburg creeks, or the youth 4-H2O Monitors Club. The session will begin in the lower level conference room of the Henry Saint John Building on the corner of South Geneva and West Clinton Streets in Ithaca. It will include walking three blocks to Six Mile Creek for an outdoor segment. Indoor and outdoor portions will take place rain or shine, and participants should dress for the weather. Register by calling 272-2292 or email tms23@cornell.edu. Tompkins Weekly May 7 7 Briefly... Breast Cancer Alliance Sets Open House In appreciation of the community support that turned their new building into a welcoming residence, and to invite the community to visit and see what the Ithaca Breast Cancer Alliance offers the community in the way of supports and information, an open house will be held on May 23 from noon to 8 p.m. at 612 W. State St. in Ithaca. Jean McPheeters, the executive director of the chamber of commerce will join in a ribbon-cutting ceremony at 5 p.m. Members of the local plumbers’, carpenters’, laborers’ and electrician’s unions and their families are especially invited, after donating hundreds of hours and materials to rehab the building. For more information call 277-0960 or visit www.ibca.net. Street Beat The word on the street from around Tompkins county. By Kathy Morris Question: Why do you think that we’re in Iraq? “With so many lives lost, it’s a tragedy — but I have no good idea.” ‘Outstanding Women’ to Be Recognized In coordination with its Women’s Expo 2007, the Cayuga Radio Group is honoring “20 Outstanding Women You Should Know.” The women, representing a wide range of backgrounds and careers, will be honored during a ceremony at the Ithaca Hilton Garden Inn. The inaugural group of “20 Outstanding Women You Should Know” includes Melinda Sue Alvich, Colleen Barnes, Jalaja Bonheim, Marian Brown, Jennifer Engel, Shawn Galbreath, Peggy Haine, Brigid Hubberman, Laurie Linn, Ruth Lucas, Maj. Deborah Lugiano, Jemma Macera, Terry Martinez, LaBerta McGruder, Alice Reid, Constance V.A. Thompson, Catherine Valentino, Marianne Dougan Varn, Anke Wessels and Lori Westervelt. Women’s Expo 2007 will be held from 4 to 8 p.m. on Thursday, May 10. The event is free and open to the public. - Steve Rae, Vermont “Favoring interest groups related to the policy makers.” - Kuei-Chiu Chen, Ithaca “I don’t think there’s a simple answer. The federal government perhaps needed a target after 9/11.” - Karen Creenan, Lansing “I was in the military. Personally, I think we were lied to. I think we’re trying to make up for what his father wasn’t able to do.” - George English, Freeville "At T-burg Shur Save, we invite you to double your savings all week long with our Buy One - Get One Free Sale, now through Saturday May 12th! Items like: Land O'Lakes sliced American Cheese; Healthy Choice Diner Entrees; Stroehmann D'Italiano Bread; Thomas' English Muffins; Oscar Mayer Lunchables; and Dole Field Green or Very Veggie Salad Mix...the list goes on. Stop in and check our in-store flyer for great savings on these and many more items storewide! Whatever your taste, you'll find everything you need along with friendly, hometown service and prices so low you're always shur to save. Come and see us today!" ~ Nathaniel Feltner & Logan Rose Submit your question to Street Beat. If we choose your question, you’ll receive gift certificates to GreenStar Cooperative Market and Ithaca Flower Shop. Simply log onto www.tompkinsweekly.com and click on Street Beat to enter. Tompkins Weekly May 7 9 By Ann Krajewski For those seeking information about the history of Slaterville Springs or Brooktondale in the Town of Caroline, there's a good chance that local resident Molly Adams has the answers they are looking for. Adams has lived in her Valley Road home since 1963, and in those 44 years she has made many contributions of time and talent to her community, including work with the town's fundraising committees, government and charities. Sitting down for a chat with Adams is like cracking open a verbal time capsule and listening to its contents, but she is much more than a walking resource library with a civic mind; she's a passionate preservationist. “I’m the one who came up with the idea to buy the [former gas station] Midnight Sun for the Caroline Town Hall,” says Adams, while sitting in her breezeway sewing floral appliqués on a square of fabric, “because among other reasons, there’s a shortage of room in the existing building and we most definitely don’t want to alter it. This landmark was built in 1869 and used to be the Slaterville school for elementary through high school grades.” There’s a good reason for Adams to feel that way, because, as Caroline volunteer Pat Brhel says, “It was Molly who was responsible for getting the town hall on the National Register of Historic Buildings, as well as making sure the soaring original arched windows remained.” When the town board voted to replace the windows, Adams sprang into action. “I did a naughty thing,” she says with a laugh. “I wrote an opinion piece in the local daily newspaper saying that [the windows] shouldn’t be taken out, because doing that would destroy the historic character of the town hall. So between inertia and not having enough money, the windows remained. Then I got some grants to pay for necessary improvements on them. By doing this the building retained enough of the original elements to petition for it to be on the National Register.” While securing the town hall's future, Adams also played an active Photo by Ann Krajewski Keeping Tabs on Town’s Best Interests Molly Adams works on a section of the next Brooktondale quilt. role in celebrating its past, as she was a key member of Caroline’s Bicentennial committee. Festivities took place in 1994 and lasted well into the next year with parades and memorials. One of Adams’ most important contributions to the events involved extensive research using local archives and sifting through endless documents which she painstakingly organized to create the markers that stand at locations of historical significance, specifically the Old Mill, the Brooktondale trestle and Besemer Station. “Historic markers are like poetry to me,” she muses, “and you have to get a whole story in about five lines.” Such writing talents also served her well in writing and editing the local newsletter and contributing a chapter on Caroline to the locally book “Towns of published Tompkins County.” She, along with Brhel, Barbara Kone and others, has been instrumental over the last decade in identifying the individuals in photographs that are an important part in the history room in Caroline. On the civic end, Adams has served as a past member of the town board, attending meetings on behalf of the Brooktondale Community Center and summarizing the minutes (a post from which she retired last month) since 1989. She also has been a member of Please turn to page 20 Traveling? Away from home? Read us on-line at tompkinsweekly.com 10 Tompkins Weekly May 7 By Ann Krajewski For those seeking information about the history of Slaterville Springs or Brooktondale in the Town of Caroline, there's a good chance that local resident Molly Adams has the answers they are looking for. Adams has lived in her Valley Road home since 1963, and in those 44 years she has made many contributions of time and talent to her community, including work with the town's fundraising committees, government and charities. Sitting down for a chat with Adams is like cracking open a verbal time capsule and listening to its contents, but she is much more than a walking resource library with a civic mind; she's a passionate preservationist. “I’m the one who came up with the idea to buy the [former gas station] Midnight Sun for the Caroline Town Hall,” says Adams, while sitting in her breezeway sewing floral appliqués on a square of fabric, “because among other reasons, there’s a shortage of room in the existing building and we most definitely don’t want to alter it. This landmark was built in 1869 and used to be the Slaterville school for elementary through high school grades.” There’s a good reason for Adams to feel that way, because, as Caroline volunteer Pat Brhel says, “It was Molly who was responsible for getting the town hall on the National Register of Historic Buildings, as well as making sure the soaring original arched windows remained.” When the town board voted to replace the windows, Adams sprang into action. “I did a naughty thing,” she says with a laugh. “I wrote an opinion piece in the local daily newspaper saying that [the windows] shouldn’t be taken out, because doing that would destroy the historic character of the town hall. So between inertia and not having enough money, the windows remained. Then I got some grants to pay for necessary improvements on them. By doing this the building retained enough of the original elements to petition for it to be on the National Register.” While securing the town hall's future, Adams also played an active Photo by Ann Krajewski Keeping Tabs on Town’s Best Interests Molly Adams works on a section of the next Brooktondale quilt. role in celebrating its past, as she was a key member of Caroline’s Bicentennial committee. Festivities took place in 1994 and lasted well into the next year with parades and memorials. One of Adams’ most important contributions to the events involved extensive research using local archives and sifting through endless documents which she painstakingly organized to create the markers that stand at locations of historical significance, specifically the Old Mill, the Brooktondale trestle and Besemer Station. “Historic markers are like poetry to me,” she muses, “and you have to get a whole story in about five lines.” Such writing talents also served her well in writing and editing the local newsletter and contributing a chapter on Caroline to the locally book “Towns of published Tompkins County.” She, along with Brhel, Barbara Kone and others, has been instrumental over the last decade in identifying the individuals in photographs that are an important part in the history room in Caroline. On the civic end, Adams has served as a past member of the town board, attending meetings on behalf of the Brooktondale Community Center and summarizing the minutes (a post from which she retired last month) since 1989. She also has been a member of Please turn to page 20 Traveling? Away from home? Read us on-line at tompkinsweekly.com 10 Tompkins Weekly May 7 Hot Fuzz: Fun with Guys with Guns By Nicolas Nicastro Recent events in Virginia and Iraq have put “Guys With Guns” back on the agenda. The Justice Department reports that over the last 28 years, more than 91 percent of gun-related murders in the U.S. were perpetrated by guys. Almost 83 percent of the victims were also guys. If “Guys with Guns” were a new product being tested for safety today, their makers would be laughed out of court. If the problem was conceived like any other social issue in America, there would be an official “War on Guys with Guns.” And so, while a light-hearted spoof like Edgar Wright’s Hot Fuzz provokes its share of laughs, the laughs now have a decidedly hollow ring. This isn’t the movie’s fault. For their part, Wright and partner Simon Pegg are only trying to do for the shoot ’em up potboiler what they did for the zombie thriller in Shaun of the Dead — satirizing a popular genre by replicating it, only in the twee, eccentric context of modern Britain. The result is as bizarre as staging the gunfight at the OK Corral in an assisted living center in Coral Gables, Fla. Pegg plays Nicholas Angel, a super-gung-ho London cop. Angel has an arrest record 400 percent higher than the department average, but this earns him no grati- Photo provided ★ ★ 1/2 Hot Fuzz . Directed by Edgar Wright. Written by Edgar Wright and Simon Pegg. At Cinemapolis. Simon Pegg and Nick Frost demonstrate the proper technique in Hot Fuzz. tude at Scotland Yard, where his gaudy competence only serves to make his colleagues look bad. Put to pasture in the quiet “model village” of Sandford, Angel finds an admirer in pudgy PC Danny Butterman (Nick Frost), but not much street action. When an apparently unrelated string of townspeople turn up grotesquely dead, the local cops prefer to think of them as accident victims. PC Angel suspects worse. As he investigates, he loosens up enough to teach PC Butterman such essential skills as how shoot two pistols while flying through the air and how to suck a toothpick while mowing down the bad Avoid High Heating & Cooling Bills guys. There’s a story here, and even a character or two, but the real pleasure is the way the movie riffs on the bottomless legacy of testosterone-fueled actioners. At one point, PC Butterman actually tries to reassure Angel by telling him, á la the end of Chinatown, “Forget it Nicholas, it’s Sandford.” At least in that instance Wright and Pegg are satirizing a good movie — in this universe, so-bad-they’re-good cult favorites like Point Break and Bad Boys also rise to the level of fundamental texts. All of this seems like a thin foundation on which to build a movie that runs more than two hours. Sure enough, Hot Fuzz drags mightily in the second act, only salvaging itself with a brilliantly realized 15-minute outburst of comic gunplay to close the story. If there can be such a thing as a sarcastic action sequence, Wright and Pegg actually find a way. But the whole thing seems just a little overstretched. This kind of spoof is more clever than new. Shaun of the Dead was funny, but hardly anything unique — people have been poking fun at zombie horrors for as long as George Romero has making them. (Dan been O’Bannon’s Return of the Living Dead is funnier than Shaun, and came out about 20 years earlier.) Likewise, I’m not sure in what universe a send-up of he-man action flicks counts as something fresh, but it surely isn’t the universe we live in. Indeed, it’s almost impossible to explain how schlock-slingers like Michael Bay and Tony Scott can live with themselves without believing they are also satirizing the genre, at least on some level. Is it really necessary to lampoon something that insists on lampooning itself ? To contact Nicholas Nicastro visit www.nicastro-books.com. Movie Ratings ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★★★★ ★★★ ★★ ★ Classic Excellent Good Fair Poor Ask us how to save Heating & Cooling Systems Home & Business Sales & Service HSC Associates Heating & Air Condition, Inc. Locally Owned and Operated 273-2180 618 W. Buffalo St., Ithaca C e l e b r a t i n g 3 0 Ye a r s “We invite you to join our family” Family Medicine Associates Robert Breiman M.D. Neil Shallish M.D. Alan Midura M.D. Lloyd Darlow M.D. of Ithaca, LLP Elizabeth von Felten M.D. Debra LaVigne RN, NP-C • Tina Hilsdorf RN, NP-C • Judy Scherer RN, FNP-C In addition to education, it takes experience to do a proper evaluation of someone’s hearing and, if necessary, fit them with the most appropriate hearing aid. Experience that’s gained from working with leaders in the field of audiology and the top physicians in otolaryngology. Experience that’s gained from years of practicing our profession in a variety of environments, including hospitals, medical offices and private practice. Experience that’s gained from working with the world leaders in the design, development and production of state-ofthe-art hearing instruments. We believe that our experience, coupled with our education and integrity, are your assurance of the highest quality hearing care. So if quality hearing care is what you’re looking for, please call us. We’ll put our experience to work for you. Joseph Bialobreski, We Welcome: Excellus Blue Shield, HealthNow, Aetna, GHI, RMSCO, The Empire Plan, Upstate Medicare Part-B, & Medicare Blue PPO Appointment Hours: M-Th 8-9, F 8-5, Sat 9-2 On-Site Laboratory • Two Locations: 209 West State St • 8 Brentwood Dr. Ithaca E-mail us at mail@fma-ithaca.com or Call today to join our family 277-4341 MA, CCC-A NYS Licensed Audiologist (607) 266-0194 2 Ascot Place, Ithaca, NY 14850 Tompkins Weekly May 7 11 Famous Staged Debate Still Resonates Poor Charles Darwin. All this fairly unassuming English naturalist of the Victorian Era wanted to do was make a thorough scientific study of nature and report on what he observed. When Darwin finally did publish the results of his decades of research in 1859, under the title of “On the Origin of Species,” the cultural response was beyond even his keen mind. Various political groups took Darwin’s concept of how organisms strive to be the ones to survive and reproduce their species and turned it into an excuse to create oppressive dictatorships. Others took the theory of evolution as a personal affront both to their religion and their God. Feeling reduced to the role of mere creatures in an indifferent Universe, many labeled the man who disliked confrontation as a tool of Satan, or even the devil Incarnate himself. Why is the concept of evolution, among all the fields of science developed over the centuries, still among the hottest of the hot buttons that stir up society to this very day? This question and other themes were explored in the play “Inherit the Wind,” recently performed at Cornell’s Schwartz Center for the Performing Arts. The play, written by Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee and first performed in 1955, is a fictionalized version of the events of the famous Scopes “Monkey Trial” of 1925, in which a Tennessee high school biology teacher was arrested for teaching evolution to his class in the town of Photo by Andrew Gillis By Larry Klaes Ed Schiff, left, and J.G. Hertzler play attorneys Clarence Darrow and William Jennings Bryan in “Inherit the Wind.” Hillsboro, which was against state law. The actors delivered fine performances, from the two main lawyers in the trial — Ed Schiff as Matthew Harrison Brady and J. G. Hertzler as Henry Drummond — to the children in various bit parts. While “Inherit the Wind” does have some interesting people in its story, most of them are essentially God-fearing Christians with rudimentary educations. Outsiders such as Drummond, the defense lawyer hired to represent the accused teacher Bertram Cates (played by Ansel Brasseur), may be intelligent and shrewd fellows, but to the townsfolk they are perceived in the same light as Darwin: agents Douglas T. McEver Agency Doug McEver “Your Insurance Advocate” Improved Rates NEW! Exclusive Features 2428 N Triphammer Rd Ithaca, NY 257-9283 INTRODUCING THE FIVE STAR SELECTION BUILT BY MANORWOOD Star NorthS309MA ft N 2378 sq approx earth's e Like th e North ts to th ays get in o p lw axis u will a can Star, yo arings if you ite e b r Su te s your a M the to a retreat and release he to relax f your day. T a cares o tar provides dNorth S or master be l fu lo handy-f ith all the use y s room w ites , and ea amenit cess too! ac American Homes of the Fingerlakes Region proudly announces the new floor plan selection of Two-story designs for a variety of lifestyles. Are you a busy young family? Do you have teens to entertain? 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Why does evolution cause such emotional uproar and produce a play that is still relevant 52 years after it first came out, while the concept of everything being composed of incredibly tiny particles called atoms or the formation of the Universe from a Big Bang of primordial matter does not? One answer lies in the reaction to what many see as a demotion of our species by evolution. In the Bible, humans are just below the angels in the Christian hierarchy, while evolution claims that we evolved from the “lower” creatures on this planet. Even a kinship to some of the more advanced organisms, namely the primates, does not bring any emotional comfort to those who believe they came straight from a divine God with no biological middle steps along the way. Even when religiously devout creationists such as Brady are confronted by Drummond with scientific evidence, and are shown the logical fallacies of certain parts of the Bible, Brady and the rest of Hillsboro remain adherents to their Christian faith. The townsfolk may not be the most worldly of people, but neither are they fools; so why do they persist in a philosophy and way of life that may not be a reflection of the real world? Biologist David Sloan Wilson of Binghamton University may have one answer to this. Sloan, who came to talk at Ithaca’s second annual Darwin Day last February, thinks that religion serves an evolutionary advantage for a large and complex species like humanity by having people function as a united group with similar modes of thought and action. Darwin also thought that beings in groups had a better chance to survive to reproPlease turn to page 18 How Will You Pay for Retirement Years? By Greg Garvan The answer to this familiar question is, “Save more; save more; save more.” People are retiring earlier then ever, with more then 50 percent of us collecting Social Security at age 63; dropping from the typical retirement at 68. Pensions used to support many people, but those funds are drying up at a quick rate. Which, well, actually leaves it up to each individual. Let’s look at some of the specifics: Social Security — These benefits are based on earnings averaged over most of a worker’s lifetime. Actual earnings are indexed to account for changes in average wages since the year the earnings were received. Then the government calculates average monthly indexed earnings during the 35 years in which an individual earned the most. Then a magic formula is applied to arrive at the basic benefit. This is the amount you receive at full retirement age. Here is where it gets a little tricky, because that age varies. Assume somewhere between 65 and 67 is the retirement age. Examine the annual earnings report that Social Security mails out to each one of us 90 days before our birthday each year for specifics. This report shows a calculation of benefits, based on the most recent information. Pension — This is a specific amount of money paid out by a prior employer. The employer sets the terms, and while a worker may have choices about how it is distributed, the assets of the pension are managed by the employer. Only about 25 percent of us are covered by pensions, and this figure is in decline. 401k/403b/IRAs, etc. — Whether we like it or not, as a country we have moved to a retirement economy based on stock portfolios, not pensions and social security. Twice as many people are covered by 401ks as private pensions. Many people are busily adding to their workplace retirement options, as well as Roth IRAs, traditional IRAs and for the self- employed a myriad of retirement choices. With all of these accounts, the size of retirement income is dependent on how well the funds of these accounts are invested and how well the stocks do in the stock market. The bottom line is retirement income is more uncertain than it has been in years. There are huge liabilities associated with the requirement that the individual manages his or her retirement income upon completion of his or her working years. For those who weren’t good “do-ityourselfers” in their 30s and 40s, managing retirement funds probably won’t improve as they age. What to do — A new study reports that some people are oversaving for retirement years. Depending on what retirement means to an individual, this may be true. But for most people here in Ithaca, it’s a good idea to keep saving through the available retirement vehicles. Remember “Save more; save more; save more,” from the beginning of this article? It’s still true. Check the social security annual earnings statement, and make sure it is correct, as well as describing projected annual income if it remains steady. Schedule a meeting with a human resources retirement specialist, if applicable. Review retirement assets, both from current work as well as any prior work accounts. Consider consolidating accounts for more efficient management when appropriate. Have a meeting with a spouse/partner about what retirement means. Will you work until you are unable to? Want to retire at 60? Be sure to track current spending. Then imagine which costs will still be in place, and which will be gone, at age 65. Create a tentative budget for those years. Finally, set up an annual review of all retirement assets and plans. If changes have occurred, factor them in. Greg Garvan is the president of Money with a Mission/FAFN, in Ithaca. Tompkins Weekly May 7 13 Tompkins County Community Calendar... May 2007 7 Monday Australian Environmental Leader to Speak on Coping with Climate Change, Tompkins County Human Services Building, 7-9pm. Rainforest activast John Seed will present “Climate Change, Despair, & Empowerment”. Sponosred by BeingChange. Info 2560224 or mesa@ecovillage.ithac.ny.us. 320 State St Birding Babylon: A SoldierNaturalist in Iraq, Cornell Lab of Ornithology, 7:30pm. Jonathan TrouernTrend will discuss the natural history of Iraq in the context of his deployment and as a crossroad of familiar paleartic birds as well as exotic Afrotopical & Oriental avifauna. Info 254-BIRD. Sapsucker Woods Rd Coffee and Talk Book Club, Lime Hollow Nature Center. 1st Mondays of the month 6:30-8pm. Info: 758-5462 Cortland Youth Center Open 129pm. Info: www.cortland.org/youth 7530872 Culturally Sensitive Parenting for All Parents and Caregivers, Cornell Cooperative Extension, 6-8pm. Share your strengths Learn new strategies (Pyramid of Success, Behavior Charts, Thinking Persons Approach and more). Free class, snacks and childcare. Info & reg 272-2292. 615 Willow Ave. Downtown Ithaca Comes to Prime Time on WCNY's Antiques Roadshow, 8pm. Joe Cassaniti will be on with a giant Buster Brown display head. email Info stephanie@downtownithaca.com or 2778679 Safety Class, Food Cornell Cooperative Extension, 8:30am-5:30pm. This is the second class of the 16-hour Servsafe Food Manager Certification Course offers nationally-recognized certification in food safety. Fee. Info & reg www.CCETompkins.org or 272-2292. 615 Willow Ave Friends of the Library Book Sale, 509 Esty St., 10am-8pm. New textbook section. Children's & adults books, records, games, puzzles, video's, CD's, DVD's, computer games & software. Info www.booksale.org or 272-2223 GED Classes, at GIAC, 9am-12pm. Free. Info BOCES 273-8804 GED Classes, at TC3 Campus, 11am2pm. Free, Info BOCES 273-8804 GED Classes, at TST Community School, 5:30-8:30 pm. Free. Info BOCES 273-8804 GED Classes, at Groton Elementaty, 79pm. Free. Info BOCES 273-8804 GIAC Teen Program Game Room, Video Games, Open Gym & Field Trips 47pm. 318 N. Albany St., Ithaca Lansing Community Library Center to Host Open Forum, 7pm. This meeting is being held to share info with the community regarding the vote on May 15th to establish the library as an inependent library. Open to all. 27 Auburn Rd Lifelong, Enhance Fitness at Lifelong 8:30-9:30am, Clay Class 10am-Noon, Enhance Fitness at Enfield Comm. Center 10:15-11:15am, Enhance Fitness at Titus Towers 10:30-11:30am, Open Computer Lab 10:30am-Noon, Strength Training at Lifelong 12:30-1:30pm, Community Bridge Group 1-4pm, Enhance Fitness at McGraw House 2-3pm, Book Discussion: The Hours 2-4pm, International Folk Dancing 79pm. Info 273-1511. 119 W. Court St. Open Computer Lab, Lifelong, 10:30am-Noon. Drop in for free internet access, one-on-one tutoring or computer help. Beginning and advanced learners are welcome. Info 273-1511. 119 W. Court St. Parenting, The Hardest Job in the World Workshop Series, Dryden Elementary School 6-8pm. Learn how to talk with your children using the skills Encouragement, Can Do, Choices, Self Control and Respecting Feelings. Free class & snacks. Info 272-2292. 36 Union St., Dryden. Sponsored by Cornell Cooperative Extension, Dryden Central School & Dryden PTA Town of Ithaca Transportation Plan-Final Public Hearing, Board Room, Town Hall, 7pm. This hearing will be the public’s final opportunity to comment on the Plan in its entirety. Info 2731747. 215 N. Tioga St Yoga for Women in Midlife, Tiamat Studio, 7-8:30pm. Explore the possiblities for renewed strength and aliveness, calm and alert mind, with acceptance and com- 14 Tompkins Weekly May 7 passionate awareness. Info 319-4138 or nishkala@twcny.rr.com 136 E. State St., 2nd floor 8 Tuesday National Teacher’s Day Arthritis Self-Help Course, Lifelong 1-3pm. April 17 thru May 22. The Finger Lakes Independence Center and Lifelong are offering a free 6-week course. Open to those with any form of arthitis or rheumatic condition. Reg & info 272-2433. 119 W. Court St. Birding in Babylon: A Soldier’s Journal from Iraq, The Lost Dog Cafe, 7pm. Jonathan Trouern-Trend has been a birder since a young age, while at the Anaconda Base in the Sunni Traingle he saw a number of variety of birds, keeping a journal of what he saw. Free. Space limited. Info sciencecafe@cornell.edu. 112 Cayuga St Business Seminar for the Local Tourism and Hospitality Industry, La Tourelle Inn. The Institute for European Studies at Cornell Univesity is sponsoring a number of events in celebration of Europe Day. Info 255-7592 or www.einaudi.cornell.edu/Eurpoe Choral Union, Dowd FIne Arts Center, SUNY Cortland, 8pm. Students, faculty, staff, & members of the community combine to present classical choral singing at its best. Free & open to all. Info www.cortland.edu or 753-2811 Cortland-Lime Hollow Birding Group, Lime Hollow Center for Environment & Culture, 7pm. Meets 2nd Tues of the month. Feb thru June. All ages welcome. 758-5462. 3091 Gracie Rd., Cortland Cortland Youth Center Open 129pm. Info: www.cortland.org/youth 7530872 Culturally Sensitive Parenting for All Parents and Caregivers, Cornell Cooperative Extension, 6-8pm. Share your strengths Learn new strategies (Pyramid of Success, Behavior Charts, Thinking Persons Approach and more). Free class, snacks and childcare. Info & reg 272-2292. 615 Willow Ave. Educator Appreciation Week, Barnes & Noble, 10am-10pm. Pre-K thru Grade 12 Educators can get an extra savings on classroom & personal purchases with a valid Educator Discount Card. Info 273-7296 or www.barnesandnoble.com. 614 S. Meadow St Evening Wildlife Walks, Cornell Plantations, 7pm. Tour the woodland pathways and varied plant habitats of the Mundy Wildflower Garden. Fee. Info 2552400 or www.plantations.cornell.edu. Meet at the Caldwell Rd. GED Classes, at GIAC, 9am-12pm. Free. Info BOCES 273-8804 GED Classes, at TC3 Campus, 11am2pm. Free, Info BOCES 273-8804 GED Classes, at TST Community School, 5:30-8:30 pm. Free. Info BOCES 273-8804 GED Classes, at Groton Elementaty, 79pm. Free. Info BOCES 273-8804 GIAC Teen Program Game Room, Video Games, Open Gym & Field Trips 47pm. 318 N. Albany St., Ithaca I Can Cope Series, Howell Education Classroom, Cayuga Medical Center, 4:406:30pm. This is a series of educaitonal classes for people facing cancer and their families and caregivers. Dinner provided. Free. Info & reg 274-4060 or 800-ACS2345 Lifelong, Canceled-Open Computer Lab 9am-Noon, Morning Watercolor Class 9am-Noon, Strength Training-St. Catherine 9:15-10:15am, Community Walk-Upper Buttermilk State Park 1pm, Afternoon Watercolor Class 1-4pm, Arthitis Self-Help Course 1-3:30pm, Advanced Microsoft Word 1:30-3:30pm. Info 273-1511. 119 W. Court St. Open Computer Lab, Lifelong, 9amNoon. Drop in for free internet access, one-on-one tutoring or computer help. Beginning and advanced learners are welcome. Info 273-1511. 119 W. Court St. PeeWee Naturalists, Cayuga Nature Center, 10am-Noon. Bring your favorite 35 year old to explore nature with us. Each program is different & includes activities, crafts, a nature walk, & snack. Info & reg www.cayuganaturecenter.org. or 2736260. 1420 Taughannock Blvd. Storytime: “The Carrot Seed”, Sciencenter, 10:30am. Listen to the story “The Carrot Seed” and plant snow pea seeds to take home. Info www.sciencenter.org or 272-0600. 601 First St Story Time, The Lansing Community Library Center, 10am. Story Time will resume for children ages 2 & up. Free & open to all. Adult must accompany children. 27 Auburn Rd. StrollerFit, Stewart Park Toddler Playgroung, 9:30am, May thru July. Parents can exercise with their stroller-age children (ages 6weeks to 4yrs). First class free. Info 351-2945 or www.strollerfit.com/ithaca Toddler Storytime, Tompkins County Public Library, 10:30am. Parents and caregivers with children from 16months-3 years. Every Tuesday. 272-4557 x275 Toddler Time Storytime, Groton Public Library, 10am. Enjoy stroies every Tuesday with Mrs. Radford. Info 898-5055 Tuesday Lunch Club, the Royal Court Restaurant, Noon. An informal lunch gettogether on the second Tuesday of the month for bereaved adults. Particiapants pay for their own food and beverage. Info email dgeorge@hospicare.org or 2720212. 529 S. Meadow St Yoga for Women in Midlife, Tiamat Studio, 7-8:30pm. Explore the possiblities for renewed strength and aliveness, calm and alert mind, with acceptance and compassionate awareness. Info 319-4138 or nishkala@twcny.rr.com 136 E. State St., 2nd floor 9 Wednesday Adult-Programming Event featuring Tess Gerritsen, The Lansing Community Library Center, 7pm. Tess Gerritsen is an internationally renowned author of many medical thrillers. Free & open to all. Info 533-4939 or 533-7779. 27 Auburn Rd Bereavement Cofffee Hour, Hospicare Center, 10-11:30am. Group focuses on the loss of a spouse or significant other, adult children are welcome to accompany. Free. Info email dgeorge@hospicare.org or 272-0212 172 E. King Rd, Ithaca Bereavement Support Group, Hospicare Center, 5:30-7pm. This group is for those who have experienced loss within the last 13 months. Free. Info email dgeorge@hospicare.org or 272-0212 172 E. King Rd., Ithaca Children's Story Time, Borders, Pyramid Mall, 11am. We'll read stories about Spring! Gather at the children's ampitheater. Info 257-0444 Cortland Youth Center Open 129pm. www.cortland.org/youth, 753-3021 DES Beginner Band/3rd Grade Chorus Spring Concert, Dryden MS/HS Auditorium, 7:30pm. Info 8448694 Dividing Daylilies and Other Cornell Cooperative Perennials, Extension, 6-8pm. Participants will practice on plants from the Demonstration Garden. Fee. Info 272-2292 or www.ccetompkins.org. 615 Willow Ave Elves Faire Workshop, 9:30am. Presented by the Ithaca Waldorf Initiative. Location & info call 539-6099 Education Family-to-Family Program, Henry St. John Building, Suite 103, 6:30-9pm. Starting Feb 28th. The Finger Lakes Chapter of the National Alliance on Mental Illness is offering a series of 12 weekly classes to help family members understand & support their ill relatives while maintaining their own well being. Free. Class size limited. Pre-reg req. Info & reg 273-2462 or 272-6573. Corner W. Clinton & S. Geneva Streets Food Addicts in Recovery Addiction Cayuga Anonymous, Recovery Services Building. 7-8:30pm. There are no dues, fees, or weigh-ins. Info 387-8329. Crn. State & Plain Sts., Ithaca Free Senior Citizen Preview of Alice In Wonderland, Lansing MS, 6:30pm. Info 533-4271 GED Classes, at TST BOCES Campus, 9-noon. Free. Info BOCES 273-8804 GED Classes, TC3 Campus, 11am2pm. Free. Info BOCES 273-8804 GED Classes, Newfield Elementary, 9:30-11:30am. Free. Info BOCES 2738804 GED Classes, South Seneca Elementary, 9am-Noon. Free. Info BOCES 273-880 GED Graduation, New York State Electric & Gas Auditorium, 7pm. Please join TST BOCES Annual High School Equivalency GED Graduation for a rewarding & memorable experience. Info 2571555 x282. Intersection of Rts 13 & 366 GIAC Teen Program Game Room, Video Games, Open Gym & Field Trips 47pm. 272-3622 318 N. Albany St., Ithaca. Basketball 7-9pm Tuesdays at BJM. 272- 3622 How to Ger “Your” Foot in the Civil Service Door, Tompkins Workforce NYCareer Center, 1-3pm. How to look up exam & job information for Tompkins County, City of Ithaca and New York State. Info 272-7570 x118. Center Ithaca Bldg, Suite 241, 171 E. State St Jazz Dance Classes with Nancy Gasper, Finger Lakes Fitness Center, 5:45pm. Nonmembers & drop-ins welcome. Info 256-3532. 171 E. State St., Center Ithaca, lower level. Kundalini Yoga, Cayuga Nature Center, 5:30pm. An ancient and exciting practice which utilizes 4 tools: Breath, Movement, Sound and Meditation. Fee. Info www.CayugaNatureCenter.org or 273-6260. 1420 Taughannock Blvd. Lecture Series, Cornell Lab of Ornithology, 7:30-9:30pm. Warbler and vireo identification; Seabird conservation; Video:Watching Warblers. Fee. Info & reg 254-2452 or www.birds.cornell.edu. 159 Sapsucker Woods Rd. Lifelong, Enhance Fitness at Lifelong 8:30-9:30am, Health Insurance Counseling 9am-Noon, I’m Retired, Now What?-Film Screening 9:30-11am, Enhance Fitness at Enfield Community Center 10:15-11:15am, Greek Favorites: Baklava and Spanokopita 10:30am-12:30pm, Enhance Fitness at Titus Towers 10:30-11:30am, Chair Yoga Class, St. Catherine 10:30-11:30am, Lansing Community Senior Group Meeting All Saints Church (533-4920)Noon-2pm, Crafting Circle 1-3:30pm, Intermediate German 1-3pm, Canceled-Italian Group 1:30-3pm, Conversational Philological Curiosities 1:30-4pm, Arthritis Peer Support Group 2-3:30pm, Enhance Fitness at McGraw House 2-3pm, Long Term Care Planning Insurance Counseling 3-6pm, Community Book Discussion Group 7-9pm. Info 273-1511. 119 W. Court St. Lynn Wiles , Watercress Bistro, Noon2pm. Performing solo guitar every Wed. Info www.watercressithaca.com or 2570823. 2 Hickory Hollow Lane, Ithaca Salad Farmers, Ithaca Children’s Garden, 4-5pm. Lots of hands-on gardening, garden ecology, games, and tastetests. For youths ages 6-12. Fee. Reg & info lam26@cornell.edu or 272-2292 x186 Save Energy Save Dollars, Cornell Cooperative Extension, 6:30pm. This is a free 2-hour workshop to help households reduce their energy usage and save money on their energy bills. Pre-reg req. Info & reg 272-2292 or crf11@cornell.edu. 615 Willow Ave Science Colloquium Series, Zabriskie Hall 102, Wells College, 12:40pm. Ayaka Harada will give a presentaion entitled “Determinants of Life Expectancy in the US: Do Economically Wealthier People Live Longer?”. Info 315364-3279 Tompkins County Water Resource Council Meeting, Borg Warner Room, Tompkins County Public Library, 6:308:30pm. WRC will discuss what monitoring is currently underway in Cayuga Lake, finidings of and insights from these monitoring efforts, & what should be monitored in the southern end of Cayuga Lake. Open to all. Info 274-5560 or khackett@tompkinsco.org. 101 E. Green St Wednesday Breakfast Club, Friendly's Restaurant at 323 Elmira Rd, 8am. An informal get-together for bereaved adults. Participant's pay for their own breakfast. Info dgeorge@hospicae.org or 272-0212. Wednesday Night Drumming and Dancing, Moonlight Dancer Studio, 79pm. Exploring rythms and expressive dance, come with your drums and desire to move, bring your friends and families. Info email jml11us@juno.com. 407 Taughannock Blvd Yellowman, the Kitchen Theatre, 7:30pm. This is a tragic love story of Alma and Eugene who struggle against the prejudices of color, gender and class that have ensnared generations of their AfricanAmerican families. Tix & info 273-4497 or www.kitchentheatre.org 10 Thursday AL-ANON Hope for Today, Meeting open to anyone affected by another person’s drinking. 7:30pm 844-4210. 518West Seneca St., Ithaca, main floor Cayuga Radio Group Women’s Expo 2007, Ithaca Hilton Garden Inn, 48pm. In coordination with Women’s Expo 2007, Cayuga Radio Group is honoring “20 Outstanding Women You Should Know”. The 20 women will be representing a wide range of background and careers & will be honored during this ceremony. Free & open to all. Info cfozmun@cyradiogroup.com or 257-6400 Cortland Youth Center Open 129pm. www.cortland.org/youth, 753-3021 Dryden Middle School Spring Instrumental Concert, Dryden MS/HS Auditorium, 7:30pm. Info 844-8694 Festival of Music Concert, Kulp Aditorium, Ithaca HS, 7pm. Boynton Middle School will feature Four World Premiers. Program made possible by a grant from the Ithaca Community Fine Arts Booster Group. Free & open to all. Info 274-2241, Tuba9@aol.com, 257-6059, or gregoryrud@aol.com Care/Adoption Foster Meeting, Human Informational Services Building, Room 142, Noon-1pm. For anyone who may be considering becoming a foster parent and/or adoptive parent and wants more info. Tompkins County has a special need for foster families in the Ithaca City School District and for families who will foster teenagers. Info 2745266. 320 W. State St GED Classes, TST BOCES Campus, 9-Noon. Free. BOCES 273-8804 GED Classes, TC3 Campus, 11am2pm. Free. Info BOCES 273-8804 GED Classes, Groton Elementary, 9am-Noon. Free. Info BOCES 273-8804 GED CLasses, Newfield Elementary, 9:30-11:30am. Free. Info BOCES 2738804 GED Classes, Candor Elementary, 9:30-12:30am. Free. Info BOCES 2738804 GIAC Teen Program Game Room, Video Games, Open Gym & Field Trips 47pm. 272-3622 318 N. Albany St., Ithaca of Education Ithaca Board Forum, Ithaca HS Candidates’ Cafeteria, 7-9:30pm. Candidates will make brief opening statements, questions will be taken from the audience. Election will be held on May 15. Kripalu DansKinetics, Tiamat Studio 139, The Commons, 7:25-8:30pm. Every Thursday. Info Sigrid Kulkowitz 272-0407 or www.flyingleaps.com Lifelong, Strength Training-St. Catherine 9:15-10:15am, Take A Break Coffee Time 9:30-11am, Poetry Writing 10-11:30am, Strength Training at Lifelong 11:30am12:30pm, Northside-Southside Book Club Noon-1:30pm, Senior Theatre Group 12pm, Open Computer Lab 1-3pm, Couples Country and Line Dancing 7-9pm. Info 273-1511. 119 W. Court St. Northside-Southside Program Book Club, Noon-1pm. Join us for a discussion of Poems written by Paul Laurence Dunbar. Info 273-1511. Lifelong Open Computer Lab, Lifelong, 1-3pm Drop in for free internet access, one-onone tutoring or computer help. Beginning and advanced learners are welcome. Info 273-1511. 119 W. Court St. Out of Bounds, WEOS-FM 88.1, 7pm. This weekly interview program will feature host Tish Pearlman in conversation with Daniel Mendelsohn who is a frequent contributor to the NY Review of Books & The New York Times Magazine. He has published an autobiographical book called “The Lost: A Search for Six of Six Million”. Info www.outofboundsradioshow.com or 277-4128 PeeWee Naturalists, Cayuga Nature Center, 10am-Noon. Begins April 17th. Bring your favorite 3-5 year old to explore nature with us. Each program is different & includes activities, crafts, a nature walk, & snack. Info & reg www.cayuganaturecenter.org. or 273-6260. 1420 Taughannock Blvd. Prenatal Yoga Classes 5:30-7pm. Diane Fine. Info fineyoga@yahoo.com 564-3690 or dianefineyoga.com Senior Theatre Troupe, Lifelong, 12pm. Meets every Thursday. Accepting new members, all levels of experience welcome, Instructor Sue Perlgut. Info 273-1511 or www.tclifelong.org. 119 W. Court St Spencer VanEtten Kidergarten Registration, Spencer VanEtten Elementary School Cafeteria, 6:30pm. Registration for eligible students planning to be enrolled for the 2007-08 Kindergarten classses. Bring proof of age, social security number & proof of immunizations. Info 589-7110. StrollerFit, Stewart Park Toddler Playgroung, 9:30am, May thru July. Parents can exercise with their stroller-age children (ages 6weeks to 4yrs). First class free. Info 351-2945 or www.strollerfit.com/ithaca Parent Toddler Waldorf Peach Blossom Afternoons Kindergarten, 23 Nelson Road. 1-3pm. For ages 2-5. Info/Register: 272-2221 Wetland Adventures After School Program, Ithaca Children’s Garden, 35pm. Learn about wetlands and the plants, animals, and invertebrates that live there. For youth ages 8-12. Fee. Info & reg 2722292 x186 or lam26@cornell.edu Yellowman, the Kitchen Theatre, Lunch Time Theater, 7:30pm. This is a tragic love story of Alma and Eugene who struggle against the prejudices of color, gender and class that have ensnared generations of their African-American families. Tix & info 273-4497 or www.kitchentheatre.org 11 Friday 6th Annual Trumansburg Festival of Flowers, Main St. Enjoy a variety of events. Art Sudio Open House 7-10pm. Live music throughout the night. Info 3876111 Alice in Wonderland, Lansing MS, 7:30pm. Info 533-4271 Back to Democracy Movie Night, Trumansburg Fire Hall, 7pm. We will be showing the revised documentary film about September 11, “Loose Change 2”, by Dylan Avery, Korey Rowe and Jason Bermas. Free. Info www.backtodemocracy.org or 387-5080. Main St./Rt 96 Butterflies in Acrylic and Colored Pencil, Cornell Plantations, 10am-3pm. This seminar focuses on the scientific illustration of butterflies and moths using acrylic paints & color pencils. Guest artist Dolores Santoliquido will provide instruction. Fee. Info www.plantations.cornell.edu or 2552400. Lewis Education Center GED Classes, TC3 Campus, 11am2pm. Free. Info BOCES 273-8804 GIAC Teen Program After Hours Spot 4-midnight. Movies, open gym, game room, video games, snacks, computers, skating & more. 272-3622 318 N. Albany St., Ithaca Lifelong, Enhance Fitness at Lifelong 8:30-9:30am, Chair Yoga Class at Lifelong 10-11am, Beginning Bridge 10am-Noon, Enhance Fitness at Enfield Community Center 10:15-11:15am, Enhance Fitness at Titus Towers 10:30-11:30am, Tai Chi Class 11:30am-1pm, Line Dancing 1:15-1:50pm, Mahjong 1:30-3:30pm, Enhance Fitness at McGraw House 2-3pm, Square, Line & Polka Dancing 2-4pm. Info 273-1511. 119 W. Court St. Movie Night, Borders Books in Pyramid Mall, 6:30-8pm. We’ll show movies that appeal to kids age 5-10. 2570444 Pajamarama Storytime, Barnes & Noble, 7pm. Join us for stories for preschool & elementary age children. Juice & snacks provided, pj"s welcome. Info 273-6784 or www.BN.com Physical Therapy for Urinary Incontinence, what you should know, Dewitt Clinton Auditorium, Kendal at Ithaca, 2-3pm. Christine Feely, MPT, of the Cayuga Medical Center Physical Therapy Department will speak on this topic. Free & open to all. Info 274-4498 Story Hour at Preschool Southworth Library, Dryden, 10am. No sign-up required - just come and enjoy stories, activities and refreshments. We are also looking for volunteer readers for this program. 844-4782 Rookie Reader Storytime, Barnes & Noble, 10:30am. Join us for stories perfect for infants & toddlers. Activities will follow. Info 273-6784 or www.BN.com Story Hour at Lansing Community Library Old Town Hall, Lansing. 2 yr olds: 10-10:20am. 3 yr olds: 10:30-11am. All children with care provider. Info: Susan 266-0266 Student Films II, Kiplinger Theatre, Schwartz Center for Performing Arts, 8pm. A showcase of seven films by Cornell advanced filmmaking students will be shown. Tix & info 254-2730. 430 College Ave Submission Deadline: Call for Artists working in monochromatic media, Community School of Music and Arts. Local artists exhibit their monochromatic works in pencil, pen-and-ink, charcoal, prints, and other media. Write to pr@csma-ithaca.org for application details Urban Cowbay, the Musical, The State Theatre, 7:30pm. Hit songs from Clint Black, Travis Tritt and Brooks and Dunn are paired with original tunes from composer Jason Robert Brown. This is a rousing, high-energy rodeo of a show that dances up a storm. Tix & info www.stateofithaca.com or 27-STATE Yellowman, the Kitchen Theatre, 8pm. This is a tragic love story of Alma and Eugene who struggle against the prejudices of color, gender and class that have ensnared generations of their AfricanAmerican families. Tix & info 273-4497 or www.kitchentheatre.org 12 Saturday Nurses Day 2nd Annual Truck & Vehicle Show, Ithaca Community Childcare Center, 10am-3pm. Explore construction & community vehicles, enjoy food, entertainment & fun. Fee. Ticket info 257-0200. 579 Warren Rd. 6th Annual Trumansburg Festival of Flowers, Main St. Enjoy a variety of events. Tree walking tour 9-10am; Taughannock Garden Club Sale 9amNoon; self guided walking and driving tours; Agriculture/Horticulture Show 9am; Antique Trail Tour 9am; Ulysses Historical Society Luncheon & Speaker Noon-2pm (tix req), Ulysses Philomathic Library Food & Wine Tasting 6-9pm (tix req) & more. Info 387-6111 7th Annual Food & Wine Tasting, Ulysses Philomathic Library, 6-9pm. Enjoy a pouring of world-renowned Finger Lakes wines accompanied by hors d’oeuvres provided by some of T’burg’s best cooks & chefs. Fee. Tix & info 387-6330 or 3874003 AARP Safe Driving Course, Lifelong, 9am-1pm. This course will teach defensive driving techniques & include info on agerelated cognitive and physical changes that affect driving. Two 4hour classes. Pre-reg & info www.tclifelong.org or 273-1511. 119 W. Court St Alice in Wonderland, Lansing MS, 7:30pm. Info 533-4271 Benefit Event for Bert Scholl, Ithaca Montessori School, 6-11pm. Viewing of “Dying to Have Known”, food, raffles, silent auction, music of Kevin Kinsella and Hank Roberts, also Pasa Fino & others TBA. Info & contributions janeas@verizon.net or danielahs@frontiernet.net. 12 Ascot Place Big Fun at the Fairgrounds, Rt 96, 10am-2pm. The Trumansburg, Trumansburg Community Nursery School invites area residents to join in a spring celebration. Kids can get a up-close look at a tractor, police car, fire truck, ambulance & race car. Chicken BBQ available. Info 3875235 or www.tcns.info Borg Warner Health & Fitness Expo, Hilton Garden Inn, 11am-4pm. Meet Dr. Kip Keino and most of the elite runners who will be participating in the Kip Keino Fun & Fitness Mile on Sunday. Info email raceinfo@kipfound.org Butterflies in Acrylic and Colored Pencil, Cornell Plantations, 10am-3pm. This seminar focuses on the scientific illustration of butterflies and moths using acrylic paints & color pencils. Guest artist Dolores Santoliquido will provide instruction. Fee. Info www.plantations.cornell.edu or 2552400. Lewis Education Center Cayuga Bird Club Field Trip, Lab of Ornithlology, 7am. Go to local hot spots to search for early spring warblers. Open to all. Info 257-0130. Sapsucker Woods Rd Celebrate Urban Birds, Cayuga Nature Center, 1pm. Today we will spend the day looking at the variety of birds who visit our area. We will be talking about how you can attract these brightly colored feathered freinds to your yard. Fee. Info 2736260 or www.CayugaNatureCenter.org. 1420 Taughannock Blvd Defensive Driving Course, TST BOCES, 9am-3:30pm. Fee. Pre-reg & pre-payment required. Info & reg 2571551. 555 Warren Rd Early Morning Bird Walk and Breakfast, Bakers Acres, 7am. Martha Fisher will be the guide for this tour. Bring binoculars & appropriate clothing. Continental breakfast after walk. Fee. Info www.bakersacres.net or 533-4653. 104 Auburn Rd., Rt 34, N. Lansing European Short Film Festival, Cornell Cinema, Willard Straight Hall, 9:15pm. The Institute for European Studies at Cornell Univesity is sponsoring a number of events in celebration of Europe Day. Info www.einaudi.cornell.edu/Eurpoe or 255-7592 Explorers Storytime 11am at Borders Books in Pyramid Mall, 2570444 Families Learning Science Together, Tompkins County Public Library, 2nd Saturday of the month, 1:002:00PM. (607) 254-8256 or kdilley@ccmr.cornell.edu Family Fun Workshop: Salad Quilts, Ithaca Children’s Garden, 1011am. These fun, one-hour workshops are great for children 5-11 and their families. Fee. Info & reg lam26@cornell.edu or 2722292 x186 Family Storytime Tompkins County Public Library. 11:30am-12pm. Free. www.tcpl.org, 272-4557 x272 Fossil ID Days, Museum of the Earth, 10-11:30am. Let us ID that funny rock or fossil find. Info 273-6623 www.museumoftheearth.org Free Boating Seminar, Auxiliary Base 508 Old Taughannock Blvd, 9am-Noon Using GPS, 1-3pm Using VHF/DSC Radio. This seminar is offered by The Ithaca Sail and Power Squadron. Reg req. Info & reg 532-4915 Friends of the Library Book Sale, 509 Esty St., 10am-8pm. Children's & adults books, records, games, puzzles, video's, CD's, DVD's, computer games & software. Info www.booksale.org or 2722223 GIAC Teen Program After Hours Spot 4-midnight. Music, movies, open gym, game room, video games, computers, skating & more. 272-3622 318 N. Albany St.. Ithaca Impeachment Tabling, in front of the Worker’s Center, 2-5pm. Info 387-5080 or burganderfarm@yahoo.com Ithaca in Bloom-A CommunityWide Planting Day, Cornell Cooperative Extension, 11am-1pm. The City of Ithaca is entered in the national contest, America In Bloom. Volunteers will assist local businesses in filling planters and window boxes with free annuals. In return volunteers will be given plants. Info 272-2292 or www.ccetompkins.org. 615 Willow Ave Jazz Dance Classes with Nancy Gasper, Finger Lakes Fitness Center, 11am. Beginners. Nonmembers & dropins welcome. Info 256-3532. 171 E. State St., Center Ithaca, lower level Kaeda Vocal Ensemble, Ford Hll, Ithaca College, 7:30pm. A Japanese women’s community chorus will perform with Voices Multicultural Chorus in their annual spring concert Sounds Across the Seas. Info & tix 257-6925 Lifelong, AARP Safe Driving Course 9am-1pm, Men’s Group 9am-Noon, Community Writing Group 1:30-3:30pm. Info 273-1511. 119 W. Court St. Moms Play Free Galaxy Golf, Sciencenter, Noon-5pm. Mothers are invited to a free round of miniature golf at the Sciencenter’s Galaxy Golf course. Info 272-0600 or www.sciencenter.org. 601 First St Morning Story Time 10am. Caroline Community Library 2670 Slaterville Rd. Slaterville Springs. www.tcpl.org Celebration Day Mothers Weekend, Tree of Life Health and Wellness, 10am-3pm. Join us for a relaxing weekend with womens health workshops, natural remedies, free drawings, healthy snack, chiropractic, massage, & a sunset cruise on Cayuga Lake. Info & res www.IthacaTreeofLife.com or 256-5433 510 W. State St Natural History Class: Migration, Lime Hollow Center for Environment and Culture, 6am (but call to check time). This class, led by Matt Young, will involve field trips only. Fee. Info & reg grosbeak@clarityconnect.com or 758-5462 or 345-7713 Nature Collage Workshops, Earth Arts, 2-4pm. For parent (or grandparent) with child aged 4 to teen, or child 8+ alone. These workshops offer creative bonding time with your child, and a chance for your child (and inner child) to play with nature. Different imaginative theme each week. Fee. Info& reg 277-5817 or pamela@pamelamossportraits.com. 689 Coddington Rd Open Community Drum Circle, Stewart Park NW corner (warm weather permitting) or inside at the Alternative Community School, 111 Chestnut St., Ithaca, 6pm. Bring your family and friends, lots of extra drums availlable. Potluck optional. Info ecstacy2@earthlink.net Open Family Swim Tompkins Cortland Community College, Dryden. 11am-1pm. Fee. 844-8222 Poetry Reading, The Red Door Cafe, 7-9pm. Featuring Katharyn Howd, Paul Hamill, Jerry Mirskin. Free. Info 898-9888. 111 Main St., Groton Skating, Public Community Recreation Center, Ithaca, 8:30-10pm. 277-7465 Real Estate Seminar-First Time Home Buying, RE/MAX Real Estate Office, 10:30am-1pm. Step by step guide to home buying, learn about the buying process, learn to avoid buying mistakes, a mortgage lender will be available to answer questions. Info www.REinMotion.com or 277-1500. 531 Esty St. Showtime Gardening to Attract Birds, Sciencenter, 2pm. John Alvarez del Castillo will share ways to make your garden attractive to birds that are in Ithaca this time of year. This presentation is part of Cornell Lab of O’s Celebrate Urban Birds event. Included with admission. Info 272-0600 or www.sciencenter.org. 601 First St Stone Circle School Spring Faire, The Foundation of Light, 11am-3pm. Fun, games, food, silent auction, bazaar. Fee. Info 273-5184. Turkey Hill Rd StrollerFit, Stewart Park Toddler Playgroung, 9am, May thru July. Parents can exercise with their stroller-age children (ages 6weeks to 4yrs). First class free. Info 351-2945 or www.strollerfit.com/ithaca The Language of Color-Art Tompkins Weekly May 7 15 Workshop, Tompkins County Public Library, 12:30pm. Info www.tcpl.org or 2724557 Waldorf Open Mornings 2nd Saturday. 10am-12pm. Register: 2722221 Yellowman, the Kitchen Theatre, 8pm. This is a tragic love story of Alma and Eugene who struggle against the prejudices of color, gender and class that have ensnared generations of their AfricanAmerican families. Tix & info 273-4497 or www.kitchentheatre.org 13 Sunday Mother’s Day 14 Monday Cayuga Bird Club Meeting, Chasing Summer Down Under: Birding Travels in Australia, Cornell Lab of Ornithology, 7:30pm. Marie Read, natural history photographer, traveled around Australia and will share her adventures in this photographic safari. Info 254BIRD. Sapsucker Woods Rd Cortland Youth Center Open 129pm. Info: www.cortland.org/youth 7530872 Creating Your Resume, Tompkins County Workforce NY-Career Center, 10am-Noon. Topics include: what you will need in order to create an effective resume for an effective job search. Info 272-7570 x118. Center Ithaca Bldg, Suite 241, 171 E. State St Culturally Sensitive Parenting for All Parents and Caregivers, Cornell Cooperative Extension, 6-8pm. Share your strengths Learn new strategies (Pyramid of Success, Behavior Charts, Thinking Persons Approach and more). Free class, snacks and childcare. Info & reg 272-2292. 615 Willow Ave. Dryden Senior Citizens, the Dryden Fire Hall, 12:15pm (dinner served), seating starts at 11:30am. Please bring your own table service. The menu will be baked ham, sweet potato, sliced beets, cole slaw, roll, & ice cream. The program will be presented by Toni Liu who will be talking about orchids & their care. Fee. Anyone who is 55 yrs or older is eligible to join Dryden Senior Citizens. If Dryden Schools are closed due to weather there will be no meeting. Info millienort@twcny.rr.com Friends of the Library Book Sale, 509 Esty St., 10am-8pm. Children's & adults books, records, games, puzzles, video's, CD's, DVD's, computer games & software. Info www.booksale.org or 2722223 GED Classes, at GIAC, 9am-12pm. Free. Info BOCES 273-8804. GED Classes, at TC3 Campus, 11am2pm. Free, Info BOCES 273-8804 GED Classes, at TST Community School, 5:30-8:30 pm. Free. Info BOCES 273-8804. GED Classes, at Groton Elementaty, 79pm. Free. Info BOCES 273-8804 GIAC Teen Program Game Room, Video Games, Open Gym & Field Trips 47pm. 318 N. Albany St., Ithaca Infant Care Class, Cayuga Medical Center. The basics on the care and feeding of your little one in the first few weeks. Fee. Info 274-4011. 101 Dates Dr. Lifelong, Enahance Fitness at Lifelong 8:30-9:30am, Clay Class 10am-Noon, Enhance Fitness at Enfield Comm. Center 10:15-11:15am, Enhance Fitness at Titus Tower 10:30-11:30am, Open Computer Lab 10:30am-Noon, Dryden Community Senior Group Meeting (Dryden Fire Hall Info 844-4454) Noon, Northeast Community Senior Group Meeting (St. Carherine Info 257-0756) 12:30pm, Strength Training at Lifelong 12:301:30pm, Community Bridge Group 1-4pm, Enhance Fitness at McGraw House 23pm, Book Discussion: The Hours 2-4pm, Ithaca AGWAY Butterfly House Open House, Cayuga Nature Center. We will be opening our popular Butterfly House for the season. Join us for some fun and learn how your can help us raise these flutterbys. Fee. Info 273-6260 or 1420 www.CayugaNatureCenter.org. Taughannock Blvd Butterflies in Acrylic and Colored Pencil, Cornell Plantations, 10am-3pm. This seminar focuses on the scientific illustration of butterflies and moths using acrylic paints & color pencils. Guest artist Dolores Santoliquido will provide instruction. Fee. Info www.plantations.cornell.edu or 2552400. Lewis Education Center Cabin Fever Concert Series, Americana Vineyards, 4-6pm. Kitchen Chair. No fee for concert. Info 387-6801. 4367 E. Covert Rd., Interlaken Food Addicts in Recovery Cayuga Addiction Anonymous, Recovery Services Building. 9am. There are no dues, fees, or weigh-ins. Everyone is welcome including those who think they may have a problem with overeating, bulimia, or anorexia, or are concerned about someone else. Info 3878329. Crn. State & Plain Sts. Friends of the Library Book Sale, 509 Esty St., 10am-8pm. Children's & adults books, records, games, puzzles, video's, CD's, DVD's, computer games & software. Info www.booksale.org or 2722223 Honoring Our Mother: A Mother’s Day Evening, Common Heart Interfaith Fellowship. Through song, poetry, silent reflection and simple participatory ritual, we will express gratitiude for our many mothers: those who raised us; our spiritural mothers; & Mother Earth. Bring an object that represents Mother to you. Free. Info 227-5683 or www.commonheart.org Impeachment Tabling, GreenStar, 25pm every Sunday Info 387-5080 or burganderfarm@yahoo.com Jazz Dance Classes with Nancy Gasper, Finger Lakes Fitness Center, 7:15pm. Nonmembers & drop-ins welcome. Info 256-3532. 171 E. State St., Center Ithaca, lower level Kip Keino Fun & Fitness Mile, Ithaca High School Track, 11am-4pm. Open masters, elite women, elite men, runners with disabilities & more. Fee. 13yrs & under free. Info email raceinfo@kipfound.org Lab of Ornithology Field Trip, Meet at Lab of Ornithology, 7-11am. Local trip. Fee. Info & reg 254-2452 or www.birds.cornell.edu. 159 Sapsucker Woods Rd. Lifelong, Community Luncheon Hosted by the Ithaca Sunrise Rotary 12:30-2pm. Info 273-1511. 119 W. Court St. Morning Bird Hike, Cayuga Nature Center, 7:30am. Jim Spear will lead the hike which will range from easy to moderate & last about two hours. All ages welcome. Info www.cayuganaturecenter.org or 273-6260. 1420 Taughannock Blvd Mother Natures Day Hike, Cayuga Nature Cener, Noon, Join our staff as we wander the woods in search of Mother Nature’s handiwork. Info 273-6260 or www.cayuganaturecenter.org. 1420 Taughannock Blvd Mother’s Day Buffet, Bakers Acres, 11am, 1:30 & 4pm. Treat Mom to BBQ Chicken, asparagus quiche, salads, breads, muffins, & dessert. Res req. Info & res. www.bakersacres.net or 533-4653. 104 Auburn Rd., Rt 34, N. Lansing Mothers Day Celebration Weekend, Tree of Life Health and Wellness, 10am-3pm. Join us for a relaxing weekend with womens health workshops, natural remedies, free drawings, healthy snack, chiropractic, massage, & a sunset cruise on Cayuga Lake. Info & res www.IthacaTreeofLife.com or 256-5433 510 W. State St Mother’s Day Hike, Meet at Cornell’s “O” parking lot (Rt366 & Caldwell Rd), 9:30am. Join the Cayuga Trails Club for a 6.5 mile hike on the Virgil Mountain Loop. Info www.cayugatrailsclub.org or 273-1708 Mother’s Day Special Event at Art of Renewal, Art of Renewal, 10am-5pm. Treat Mom to a day of bliss, complete with massage, yoga, sailing and refreshments. Info www.aorenewal.com or 592-0316 PeeWee Naturalists, Cayuga Nature Center, 1-3pm. Celebrate Earth Day by exploring spring flowers and birds, reading a story & sharing it all together. Crafts & healthy snack. Fee. Info www.CayugaNatureCenter.org or 2736260. 1420 Taughannock Blvd. Spring Birds Hike, Cayuga Nature Center, 7:30-9;30am. Fee. Info 273-6260 or www.CayugaNatureCenter.org. 1420 Taughannock Blvd The Enfield Volunteer Fire Co. Chicken BBQ, Enfield Fire Station, 11am till gone. Names will be entered for prizes which will be drawn at this BBQ. Fee. 172 Enfield Main Rd, Rt 327 Yellowman, the Kitchen Theatre, 4pm & 8. This is a tragic love story of Alma and Eugene who struggle against the prejudices of color, gender and class that have ensnared generations of their AfricanAmerican families. Tix & info 273-4497 or www.kitchentheatre.org 16 Tompkins Weekly May 7 Caroline Community Senior Group Meeting (Brooktondale Comm Center Info 273-2029) 5pm, Ellis Hollow Community Senior Group Meeting (St. Catherine Info 277-8149) 7pm, International Folk Dancing 7-9pm. Info 273-1511. 119 W. Court St. Open Computer Lab, Lifelong, 10:30am-Noon. Drop in for free internet access, one-on-one tutoring or computer help. Beginning and advanced learners are welcome. Info 273-1511. 119 W. Court St. Senior Art Exhibit, String Room Gallery, Main Building, Wells College, 79pm. The Wells College Art Department is pleased to present the spring senior thesis exhibit featuring paintings and photographs by graduates Abby Corbly and Blythe Untiet. Info www.wells.edu or 315364-3237 Yoga for Women in Midlife, Tiamat Studio, 7-8:30pm. Explore the possiblities for renewed strength and aliveness, calm and alert mind, with acceptance and compassionate awareness. Info 319-4138 or nishkala@twcny.rr.com 136 E. State St., 2nd floor Upcoming Events Art In Bloom, the Johnson Museum of Art, 5-7pm. See the amazing floral creations of the Ithaca Garden Club, inspired by works of art in the Museum’s collection. Free. Info 255-6464. Friday May 18th 6th Annual Primitive Pursuits Day, 4-H Acres, 10am-5pm. A full-day family festival of primitive technologies. Info www.primitivepursuits.net. Fee. Lower Creek Rd off Rt 13. Saturday May 19th Spring Garden Fair & Plant Sale, Ithaca HS, 9am-1pm. Vendors and sales of annuals, perennials, herbs, shrubs & trees, demonstrations, exhibits fun activities for kids& more. Info 272-2292 or www.ccetompkins.org. Sponsored by Cooperative Extenison . Cornell Saturday May 19th Submit Your Calendar Listing: • visit tompkinsweekly.com and click on submissions • email: jgraney@twcny.rr.com • fax 607-347-4302 • write: Tompkins Weekly PO Box 6404, Ithaca, NY 14851 Deadline: is each Wednesday for the following Monday's paper. Our Nursery is Blooming! Our selection is fantastic! You'll love our gorgeous flowers and trees. Ask us which will grow best at your home. ❀ Mother's Day is Sunday May 13th Plant a tree and give Mom a gift she'll remember for years! 213 S. Fulton St. & Rt. 13 272-1848 M-F 8-6, Sat 8-5, Sun 9–4 There was much talk but no approval on May 1 for setting county financial goals for 2008. The Tompkins County Legislature failed to muster enough votes to approve a proposal that would have established the target of a maximum 3.6 percent tax levy increase and 2.1 percent tax rate increase, to frame the 2008 budget process and require a projected $1.1 million reduction in locally controlled spending. The failed proposal also would have established the intent to use 2008 to begin a process of stabilizing the rate of county tax levy increases. Although the vote was 6-5 (with four legislators absent), the measure did not win the eight votes needed for passage. Legislators Martha Robertson, Greg Stevenson, Jim Dennis, Dooley Kiefer voted no, and chairperson Tim Joseph broke the tie to defeat the measure. (Legislators Dick Booth, Kathy LuzLeslyn McBeanHerrera, Clairborne and Tyke Randall were absent.) An alternate proposal advanced earlier by Legislator Mike Hattery to set a more stringent goal of a 1.5 percent tax levy increase, with a 0 percent increase in the tax rate, failed by a vote of 4- 7. Hattery called the proposed targets too high and said a lower target would force the county to face up to necessary program and personnel cuts. Dennis, Robertson and Kiefer all advocated having no financial goal for 2008, saying that the legislature should leave it to the judgment of County Administrator Steve Whicher and department heads to present a budget proposal for Legislature consideration. Dennis expressed confidence that the County Administrator and department heads “have a good sense of what we need and what the county can support.” Robertson said she’s not convinced that setting a goal at this early stage does anything other than cause tension and called a goal “patronizing” to county staff. It’s up to the legislature, she said, to show discipline and not be restricted by a “straitjacket.” Kiefer called the 2007 budget process “a failed experiment” and said that, unlike last year, she wants to see a budget proposal that the county administrator can recommend. Supporters, however, countered that setting a target provides needed direction and, as Legislator Mike Sigler put it, adds transparen- cy to the budget process. Legislator Nathan Shinagawa called the proposed 3.6 percent tax levy increase goal realistic, and Budget and Capital Committee chairperson Mike Koplinka-Loehr said that the projected spending reductions of more than $1 million would impose significant discipline. Whicher cautioned that no reduction in the tax levy can be achieved without reducing programs. What’s really important, said Legislator Pam Mackesey, is stabilizing tax levy increases and not being subject to “wild gyrations” of tax changes that have happened in the past which, she said, waste both time and money. A motion to reconsider the proposal is likely at the legislature’s next meeting on May 15. In other business, county lawmakers reviewed the 2007 Criminal Justice/Alternatives to Incarceration (CJ/ATI) Strategic Action Plan, the product of nearly a year of research and analysis by the county’s Criminal Justice/ Alternatives to Incarceration Board. CJ/ATI board chairperson Suzi Cook said Photo by Kathy Morris Legislature Fails to Agree on Budget Goals Green Thumb: TST-BOCES instructor David Corning, left, helps Shawn Warters select flower packs at the student-run greenhouse in preparation for the school’s 23rd annual plant sale on Warren Road. The greenhouse is open to the public starting Monday, May 7, and hours are weekdays from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. that the program’s goal, as established in the plan, is to “safely reduce the county’s jail population through measurable accomplishments in criminal justice practices related to ATI programming over the next 12 months. Without dissent the legislature also accepted the 2007 Alternatives to Incarceration Consolidated Service Plan, as approved by the CJ/ATI board, to be submitted to the state Division of Probation and Correctional Alternatives. Submission of the service plan is required each year to secure state funding for ATI programs. The $26,800 to be received this year will fund salary and benefits for an Alternatives to Incarceration Substance Abuse Counselor. Tompkins Weekly May 7 17 Cauga Medical Center Birth Announcements SINN – Anthony Sinn Sr. and Heather Carman, Ithaca, a daughter, Aubrie Faith, on April 3. BECKLEY – Donald and Kimberly (Schlobohm) Beckley, Newfield, a son, William Matthew, on April 4. GREEN – Alan and Christina (Sheriff) Green, Newfield, a daughter, Grace Christiana, on April 4. NICHOLS – Heather Marie French, Ithaca, a son, Aiden Michael, on April 4. FISHER – Paul and Karen (Geissinger) Fisher, Ithaca, a daughter, Julianna Grace, on April 5. FULLER-STETSON – Richard and Elicia Fuller, Stetson Brooktondale, a daughter, Dakota Lynn, on April 5. HENDERSON – Kyle Henderson and Erin Flannery, Newfield, a daughter, Alissa, on April 6. KLINGLE – Glenn Klingle and April Andersen, Richford, a son, Aiden Andersen, on April 6. RENNE – David and Georgia (Allenbaugh) Renne, Ithaca, a son, Nason David, on April 6. STONE – Robert and Amy (Boykin) Stone, Moravia, a daughter, Sophia Ann, on April 7. TAGUE-BLEAU – Cat Tague and Jeanine Bleau, Brooktondale, a daughter, Eva Rose Frances Jeanine, on April 8. NEFF – Frederick Neff and Debra Woodard, Trumansburg, a daughter, Samantha Renee, on April 9. HORTON – Thomas and Casey (McAfee) Horton, Cortland, a daughter, Gwyneth Faith, on April 10. SULLIVAN – Robert and Susan (Chamberlain) Sullivan, Lansing, a daughter, Kathleen Marie, on April 10. ALBRECHT – Victor Albrecht and Katelyn Cooper, Interlaken, a son, Eli Christopher, on April 12. JUNG – Jai Kwan Jung and Woojung Nam, Ithaca, a son, Justin Sol, on April 12. MILLER – Woodrow and Eunice (Wilson) Miller, Ithaca, a daughter, Tumude Nahnie Hadassah, on April 12. STULL – Scott Stull and Laurie Hemmings, Dryden, a daughter, Emma Carol, on April 12. VAZQUEZ – Frasmo Cruz Lopez Vazquez and Martha Leticia Vazquez Jonapa, a daughter, Samantha Jacqueline Lopez, on April 14. BREHM – John and Renee (Hoover) Brehm, Groton, a daughter, Lena Jo, on April 15. PANKAJ – Pankaj Jaiswal and Sushma Naithani, Ithaca, a son, Aroonim Sushma, on April 15. ALLEN – Bridget Mosher, Ithaca, a son, Michael Joseph, on April 16. LEONARD – Bill Leonard Jr. and Nichole Wayman, Willseyville, a daughter, Ava Lynn, on April 18. RILEY – Christopher Riley and Nicole Roy, Ithaca, a son, Julian Freer, on April 18. NEWKIRK – Gregory and Carrie (Ensign) Newkirk, Marathon, a daughter, Catherine Joann, on April 19. OSBURN – Brent and Liza (Graham) Osburn, Berkshire, a daughter, Addysen Rose, on April 19. RUNYAN – Todd and Abby (Nielson) Runyan, Ithaca, a son, John Russell, on April 19. SALAMANCA – Hans SalamancaGranados and Kristina BlakeHodek, Ithaca, a daughter, Isabella Sofia, on April19. GARZON – Francisco and Joyce (Reaume) Garzon, Trumansburg, a daughter, Erica, on April 20. ARROYO – Juan and Michelle (Morin) Arroyo, Ithaca, a son, Tomas Ciriaco, on April 21. BIDWELL – Albert Bidwell and Heather Lockwood, Dryden, a son, Ian James, on April 22. CRUZ-JOHNSON – Jonathan Cruz and Pamela Reh Cruz, Ithaca, a son, Elijah Matthew Amir, on April 22. AUBLE – Brandon and Alecia (Turo) Auble, Ithaca, a son, on April 23. RAQIB – Toyetta Diaz Johnson, Ithaca, a son, Malik Hanif, on April 23. SCOFIELD JR. – Douglas and Tammy (Smith) Scofield, Enfield, a son, Douglas Jay, on April 24. LANSING – Shawn and Carrie Lansing, Trumansburg, a son, Lincoln Michael, on April 25. JUETT – Michael Juett and Holly Franklin, Ithaca, a son, Cameron James, on April 26. PARK – Chang Hee Park and Jiyoung Lee, Ithaca, a daughter, Claire Sieun, on April 27. PURINGTON – Zachary and Amanda (Drake) Purington, Locke, a daughter, Kylah Gylden, on April 27. SINE – Wesley and Anne (Myres) Sine, Ithaca, a daughter, Claira Faye, on April 28. DONAHUE – Joshua Buisch and Toni Lupo, Newfield, a son, Mason Edward, on April 29. PAZ – John Paz and Deanna Nassar, Ithaca, a daughter, Maria Elena Teresa, on April 29. Response Continued from page 2 Among the changes he’d like to see in the district is an improvement in staff morale. “The atmosphere when I graduated was very positive. There were always issues, but the morale of staff was high and it was an excellent place to attend and be part of,” Ainslie says. “The atmosphere now is not what it should be. There are leadership issues, and diversity issues. A large part of the community feels disenfranchised, and there’s a lack of communication between school administration and the community. It can be better.” Meet the Candidates A forum featuring the five candidates for four seats on the Ithaca City School District Board of Education will be held Thursday, May 10, from 7 to 9:30 p.m. in the Ithaca High School cafeteria. Each candidate will make a brief opening statement, and questions from the audience will be verbal and strictly timed with a two-minute time limit. Questions may be directed to a specific candidate but other candidates will also be allowed to answer if they wish. Candidates have two minutes to answer. If time allows, candidates will make a closing statement. The event will be videotaped for later viewing on public access TV. Tables will be available for candidate campaign literature. The event is sponsored by the League of Women Voters of Tompkins County, Ithaca Council of PTAs and the American Association of University WomenIthaca Branch. The moderator is Lucia Arm-strong. The school board election and budget vote is onTuesday, May 15 Items Needed for Brooktondale Sale The Brooktondale Community Center is looking for books, records, tapes, CDs and DVDs in good condition for the annual book sale on May 11 and 12. Call Mary at 539-9949 or Brooke at 5396858 if you have something to donate. Those who want to be listed on the May 12 yard sale map should send $5 to help with advertising costs and a list of the five most interesting items to the center at P.O. Box 135, Brooktondale, N.Y. 14817. There is space available for rent at the yard sale. Also, a meeting will be held at the Old Fire Hall, Brooktondale Community Center, on May 9 at 7 p.m. for those own a business in Caroline or are interested in starting one. Organizers are working on a new edition of the Caroline Business Directory. If you would like a free listing, send information. The me your Community Center, which prints the directory, is accepting donations to help with the printing costs. The next edition will be available in May at the Town Hall, the Community Center, the farmers market, the post offices and at businesses in town. Keino Event Draws Elite Class Runners A star-studded international field is expected in Ithaca on Sunday, May 13, for the inaugural Kip Keino Mile, a race that honors the legendary Kenyan runner for his accomplishments as an athlete and humanitarian. The men’s race is arguably the finest mile/1500 meter field assembled outdoors in the U.S. this year, including nine sub-4minute milers from five countries. Headlining the field are 2006 Commonwealth Games gold and Willis medalist Nick American Anthony Famiglietti, winner of the 2007 U.S. 8k championships in New York City. The women's field boasts nine top runners from the U.S., Canada and Ethiopia. The Kip Keino Weekend, May 11 to 13, includes elite and citizen races, the Borg Warner Health and Fitness Expo and an evening banquet saluting Kip Keino. For more information e-mail raceinfo@kipfound.org, or contact Michelle Thompson at 227.8374. Debate Continued from page 12 ductive age than individuals on average. While the idea of group-level adaptation may not be the only answer to this enigma, it does offer some insight into why an entire town, or a nation, often place their knowledge and trust in a concept and hierarchy of beings that are emotionally and socially satisfying while remaining unproven by science. The next question is, will we evolve beyond the need for comfort that has no visible means of support, and will we still be human after that event? The program notes from the Schwartz Center playbill offer this perceptive quote from Charles Darwin: “We can allow satellites, planets, suns, universe, nay whole systems of universes, to be governed by laws, but the smallest insect, we wish to be created at once by special act.” 18 Tompkins Weekly May 7 Classifieds Automotive Used Cars/Trucks & New/Used Parts. Roof to road, bumper to bumper.Also paying cash for your vehicle - dead/alive. We also sell new crash parts, headlamps, tail lamps, radiators & gas tanks. DANBY MOTORS 607-273-8049. Honda, Hyundai, Nissan, Toyota, Volvo, Volkswagen/Audi + GM/ Chrysler/Ford (Used) Large Selection. Apply on-line Special Financing SelectEuroCars.com Nearly 30 Years, 7 Days a Week (315) 789-9368. Two Convenient Locations Same Great Service Autoworks 277-9989 at 1278 Dryden Rd., and Autoworks Express 277-FAST 987 Dryden Rd., M-F 7:30am-5:30pm Experience our Hospitality - Cortland Ford, 3870 West Road, Rt. 281. 7533077, 1-800-788- FORD (3673) Building Materials Architectural Salvage For Sale: Doors, Hardware, Lighting, Clawfoot Tubs and more! Good Quality, Great Value. Porcelain Refinishing, too! Building Preservation Works, LLC - 45 James St., Homer, NY 607-749-8889. www.preservationworks.com. Employment Writers Wanted. Interested in writing for Tompkins Weekly? We are looking to expand our group of writers. Contact Editor Jay Wrolstad at 607539-7100 or email wrols@twcny.rr.com Delivery Drivers Wanted. Must be reliable with your own transportation. References please. Part - time. Call Tim at 607-339-9774 Food & Drink Your Hometown Grocery T-Burg Shur Save Rt 96, T-Burg 387-3701 Celebrating 30 Years Family Medicine Associates of Ithaca 209 W. State St & 8 Brentwood Dr. email mail@fma-ithaca.com or277-4341 Provides Positive Adult Role Models For Students- The first of ten good reasons to have a 100% Tobacco-Free policy. STOPP. -555 Warren Road, It Home Shortstop Deli Open 24/7 at 204 W. Seneca St., Ithaca 273-1030________ Two Locations to Serve You Best GreenStar 701 W. Buffalo St. 2739392 & 215 N. Cayuga St 273-8210 Joe's Restaurant- 19 signature pizzas and 7 signature wing sauces, among other delicious italian entrees. 602 W. Buffalo St. 256-3463 For Rent LAKESIDE —West shore, modern, fully furnished, 2 bedroom. Check our website: www.cayugalake.biz Ideal for visiting faculty/grad student. Short term lease (Aug 2007-May 2008) $895/mo (607-532-4494). For Sale Buy-Sell-Trade New and Gently Used Children’s Clothing Mama Goose 401 W. Seneca St. 269-0600 PS2 $99 / X Box $149 / Game Cube $69.95 with 3 Free Games or DVD's and 90 Day Warranty. Media Max 607341-3636 buyselltradeitnow.com Health Full Service Eye Care- Trumansburg Optical. Neil Henninger, O.D. 79 E. Main St. Appointments 387-7327 T w o Convenient Loca tions Same Gr ea t Ser vice! 277-9989 1278 Dryden Rd. Servicing All Makes & Models M-F 7:30am-5:30pm; Sat 8:30-12:30 Now in Our New Permanent Location MediaMax - HO-RC S H O P 2 4 / 7 AT buyselltradeitnow.com BUY 1 GET 1 FREE Hobbies, Music & Sports, Electronics see store for details - one coupon per customer Home Repair, Energy Efficiency Modifactions, Handy Man JobsSunny Brook Builders. 539-6286, www.sunnybrookbuilders.com Excavating & Drainage. Estimates, Full Insured. Mancini-Ferrara & Sons, Inc. 608 Elmira Rd., Ithaca 272-3600 Seed Starting Supplies - Ithaca Agway Lawn & Garden Center. 213 S. Fulton St & Rt. 13. 272-1848 Insurance Always There, State Farm Insurance, 1111 Triphammer Rd. Call 257-8900 Larkin Insurance Home, Auto, Business 401 N Aurora St., 273-4732 Lawn & Garden Cayuga Compost--Bulk sales of high quality compost, soils, and mulch products. Pick up or delivered. 387-6826 Using organics to offer tomorrow's solutions today. Leisure Fall Creek Pictures Show Info 2721256 or Cinemopolis 277-6115 http://cinemapolis.org/home.asp Pets Your Yard, Garden & Pet Place, Ithaca Agway, 213 S. Meadow St. 272-1848 Real Estate GOLF • FISHING • LACROSSE • PAINTBALL • SKATEBOARDS • BIKES • KNIVES • SWORDS • RC HOBBIES • COMPUTERS Hard-To-Find VINTAGE CDs, DVDs, & VHS, etc. “EBAY SELLERS & BUYERS • Noboby Beats Our Price” Bus Route 35 or 47 outbound in front of the Salvation Army Store 317 Harrison Ave. • Endicott, NY 13760 Mon. Wed. Thurs. Fri 12-8pm • Saturday 12-5pm 607-785-4380 Salons The Mane Event. 200 Pleasant Grove Rd., Community Corners. 266-8809 Wanted to Buy Cash for Cars/Trucks/Tractors. We'll pay for what you have. DANBY MOTORS 607-273-8049. We Buy, We Sell, You Save- Instant Replay Sports. Check us out! 315 Third St. Ithaca. 277-7366 or at the Rink in Lansing, 216-0056. ithacainstantreplaysports@yahoo.com Games & Electronics. Broken or not video games & systems, I-Pods, Cell Phones, Zunes, Laptops, Media Max 317 Harrison Ave., Endicott, NY next to Valvoline Oil Change off Main St., 17-C Open M, W 10-6, Th, Fri noon-8 Sat 12-5 buyselltradeitnow.com 607785-4380 Real Estate 277-FAST 987 Dryden Rd. No appointment needed Come in & get out FAST! M-F 7:30am-5:30pm Complete Automotive Care Tune Ups Oil Changes NYS Inspections Tires Radiators Brakes Half-Price Towing and Free Shuttle Service Sell It Fast! We'll run your classified line ad for only $5! (per 10 words) Mail to: Tompkins Weekly Classifieds, PO Box 6404 Ithaca NY 14851, fax this form to: 607-347-4302, (Questions? Call 607-339-9774) or enter your classified information from our website www.tompkinsweekly.net 1.Category:__________________________________________________ 2.Message:___________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________ 3. Place in Issues Dates (We publish on Mondays): _______________________ 4. Choose: Line Classified ad: $5/10 words (25 cents for each additional word) and/or Display Classified ad = $15.00 per column inch (One Column: 23/8" wide) 5. Total Enclosed: ___________________________ (Pre-payment is required for classified ads. We welcome cash, check or money order. Deadline is 1pm Wednesday prior to publication). 6. We cannot print your ad without the following information. It will be kept strictly confidential. Name:____________________________ Ph:_______________________ Address:_____________________________________________________ Tompkins Weekly May 7 19 Response “The infrastructure Shurtleff. we’re working with is on borrowed time.” Continued from page 1 Kerrigan same operating platform — long before those events occurred. It’s now a national initiative.” With these expenses secured, Shurtleff anticipates testing the equipment in July. Users will require training, as well. “The equipment for the most part is very similar to what they operate with,” says Shurtleff. “Now we’ve got additional frequencies and the ability to talk to people you couldn’t talk to before.” Shurtleff says that the unveiling of the system will be only the beginning of changes in the county’s emergency communications. “The system has been built with enough capacity to provide for other responders to be a part of it,” he says. Agencies that may eventually have an opportunity to tap into the system include the county public health, highway and transportation departments. “The sooner I can retire the older system and be working on the newer, more reliable one, the better we’ll be, the safer we’ll be,” says Continued from page 1 some even comparing the process to the way the city appoints department heads. While in some municipalities the judge is an elected position, Ithaca’s charter gives the mayor power over the appointment, including how the selection process is run. But if Peterson had her way, that would change. “I would just as soon have this be an elected position,” she says. Youth Continued from page 5 human rights in Ethiopia, Bhopal, Guatemala and Darfur. Student Andrew Harned says that he is most interested in the Guatemala situation, as he would like to see the dictator Montt go to trial. He and adviser Kara Frost Clapp also report that there is always a “special focus case” — this year Ethiopia’s Mesfin Woldemariam — for all of the GOTB groups to rally around, and that the Trumansburg contingent does a lot of letter writing beforehand to people in involved with these countries, such as ambassadors. “Historically, the chosen person is almost always freed by the end of the school year, which gives us all a sense of accomplishment,” she says. According to Harned and ParkerCarver the Trumansburg Amnesty International group sponsors speakers and movies, followed by discussion, that are open to the public throughout the year. Tree Nursery Continued from page 6 the root systems they were getting and I was very impressed by it,” he says. The city parks division and Shade Tree Advisory the Committee hope to tap into this new local resource. “We're happy they are here. We have high hopes,” says Hillman. RPM Ecosystems also has high hopes. They are researching biomass fuels based on fast growing hardwoods, formerly an oxymoron, and they feel strongly that their trees will aid carbon banking and mitigation in a global-warming future. Fighting global warming with trees and helping to landscape the post-Katrina Gulf south, sounds like serious fun. Town Continued from page 10 Historic Ithaca and a tireless volunteer with the center since it opened, the former Brooktondale pre-school and the Town Historian. Of all the obligations she has taken on, however, she does have a favorite — the well-known Brooktondale quilt. “My husband, Barry, who is an English professor, and I took a year’s sabbatical to England in 1974,” she recalls. “When we returned some of the neighbors I’d previously volunteered with were busy working on a quilt. This was something I was very interested in doing and this quilt was our first. I can say that I've worked on every one of them. In fact, at this point much of the time we gather at my home to work on it.” When the quilt is finished it will be on display at the Handwork Gallery in downtown Ithaca until it is raffled off at the annual Brooktondale Apple Festival in the fall. The Brooktondale Quilt is regarded by many as a coveted work of art and is consistently the the for fundraiser biggest Brooktondale Community Center. Briefly Builders Association Members become Certified Graduates The Tompkins/Cortland Builders & Remodelers Association is pleased to announce that a select group of members have earned the Certified Graduate Builder (CGB) or Certified Graduate Remodelor (CGR) designation. CGB and CGR are exclusive professional designations designed to emphasize business management skills as they key to a professional operation. Developed by the National Association of Home Builders, the programs require that graduates meet prescribed standards of business practice, possess industry experience, have a proven track record of successful project management, complete a comprehensive education curriculum, and pledge to uphold the program's code of ethics. The most recent graduates are: Brooke Greenhouse, CGB, Cayuga Country Homes Gregory Hoover, CGB, Hoover Industrial Supply Kevin McMahon, CGB, KJM Contracting, Inc. Ronald Ronsvalle, CGB, Perfect Painters/Heritage Builders Dean Shea, CGR, Sunny Brook Builders of Enfield Builders and remodelers who are interested in taking the classes to earn the CGB or CGR designation can take courses held throughout New York State. An assessment test is required first. More information about the class schedule can be found at www.tcbra.com. Consumers can find more information and a current listing of certified professionals at www.nahb.org. 20 Tompkins Weekly May 7