http://www.columbiaspectator.com/sites/default/files/issues/archive/09-24-10%20Web

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Vol. CXXXIV—No. 84

Friday, September 24, 2010

State-funded Barnard program shuts down

New rules for gardens offer temporary protections

Admins say Liberty financially unstable, parents launch protest

BY DAMIAN HARRIS-HERNANDEZ Columbia Daily Spectator New York City gardeners, who were once vulnerable to city evictions, will be able to see next year’s harvest to fruition. In West Harlem, local gardeners said they are pleased with a new piece of legislation passed last week by the Bloomberg administration, which offers an umbrella of protection to the city’s 282 embattled community gardens. The newly adopted Community Garden Rules go into effect next month—promising limited protection to tidy and well used gardens. Activists say they are relieved the gardens are currently off the chopping block, but are still very concerned about the future. “We are very happy about it,” said gardener Ivy Walker, who lives across the street from the Carrie McCracken TRUCE Community Garden in West Harlem, a community garden that benefits from the city’s new rules. Before the city enacted the guidelines, the garden fell under the jurisdiction of the Department of Housing Preservation and Development, which reserves the right to evict gardens at any time on two weeks notice. The new rules brought the garden under the control of the Department of Parks and Recreation, which now says it has committed to protect gardens from commercial development, as long as they are well maintained. As an active garden member, Walker tends to the flowers and teaches on-site gardening classes. “I hope we never lose it,” she said. But green activist groups like New York City Community Gardens Coalition say the new rules do not offer community gardens lasting protection from developers eyeing “unused” space. “The new rules don’t give the gardens permanence,” said Steve Kidd, a NYCCGC board member, who initiated the revitalization of the McCracken garden in 2008: “They only offer us a respite.” A flaw that critics cite with the

SEE GARDENS, page 2

BY MADINA TOURE AND CHELSEA LO Columbia Daily Spectator

EMBRY OWEN / SENIOR STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

EPIC NEW WEBSITE | Christia Mercer, chair of Lit Hum and a philosophy professor, oversaw the redesign of the website, which now features images, paintings, video clips, and audio files.

Literature Humanities website gets makeover BY AMBER TUNNELL AND SCARLETT TOHME Columbia Daily Spectator Literature Humanities has now arrived in the 21st century. The website for Lit Hum— one of Columbia’s trademark Core courses—has previously only given basic information about the class. Now, after a full-blown makeover, the website features images, paintings, video clips, and audio files that complement the works read in class. The change is meant to make the course more engaging for students, said Christia

NEWS BRIEF

Barnard investigates Grant’s Tomb for commencement location If Barnard has its way, the class of 2011 will hold its commencement off campus below a national memorial. The administration is currently investigating the possibility of Grant’s Tomb as the commencement location, Barnard President Debora Spar said on Thursday. It’s still a work in progress, and a complicated one, she said, because this location involves working with different public agencies. If approved, the ceremony would be held in the park extending southward from the steps of the tomb—a federal monument on 122nd Street. Spar said she and other administrators presented several options to a group of students recently. “We were interested to see that they

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were pretty unanimous in their view,” she said. This process so far has been less controversial than last year’s selection—administrators had initially settled on Dodge’s Levien Gym, but after students protested, they moved the ceremony to Ancel Plaza outside the International Affairs Building. If Barnard can’t work out the logistics of Grant’s Tomb, South Lawn is a back-up, administrators said. “It’s a spectacular spot,” Spar said of Grant’s Tomb. “As a number of students pointed out, it feels very Barnard because it’s leafy and green and quite elegant, but it’s in the city and you’ll cross city streets to get there. It’s a beautiful processional.” —Sam Levin

Mercer, the chair of Lit Hum and a professor of philosophy, who oversaw the overhaul. For example, for Plato’s “Symposium,” the site has a clip from of the song “the Origin of Love” from the film “Hedwig and the Angry Inch,” where a singer sings a song based on Aristophanes’ speech about love. “I want to combine intellectual seriousness with edginess,” Mercer said. “We want to make Lit Hum intellectually cool.” Elizabeth Bonnette, a Ph.D. candidate who is teaching Lit Hum this year, said she plans to utilize the website in her

class through weekly responses which incorporate a piece of art from the site. Bonnette said her class recently started “Gilgamesh” and that she liked how students could actually watch videos of people carving on tablets—the manner in which the work was originally written. “It’s going to be nice for them to explore things we don’t get to in class,” Bonnette said. The Lit Hum website is also meant to encourage connections with other required Core classes, such as Art and Music

SEE LIT HUM, page 2

Wi-Fi may come to city parks, but only at a price BY VALERIYA SAFRONOVA Columbia Daily Spectator Wireless Internet may be coming to Riverside Park–but it will cost you. Time Warner Cable and Cablevision recently agreed to provide Wi-Fi to 32 parks

“If you don’t have a credit card, it sounds like you can’t use the wireless at all.” —Gale Brewer, City Council member across the five boroughs as early as next year, but it will only be free for three

Arnell Benjamin, a 15-yearold high school student, froze when he heard that the Liberty Partnerships Program would be closing. “I didn’t react. I was just dead,” he recalled of the moment he learned that the Barnard tutoring program was shutting its doors. “I just froze.” He had been a part of the program since 7th grade, and his grades in school had improved as a result. “I met a lot of good friends here. I got my grades up. I had fun,” he said. Benjamin attended a demonstration at Barnard on Thursday afternoon, joining a small group of parents and students protesting the administration’s recent decision to eliminate the Liberty Partnerships Program due to financial concerns. The state-funded program— which provided academic and social support to neighborhood students—consisted of an academic-year curriculum in which students came to Barnard twice a week and received individualized tutoring from a tutor-counselor, as well as a summer program in which students volunteered at an internship site. To some parents, Liberty is irreplaceable. But to administrators who built and promoted the program, Liberty in recent

a state of uncertainty Barnard had no choice but to end the state-funded program, Vivian Taylor, vice president for community development and Barnard President Debora Spar’s chief of staff, said in an email sent to students at the end of August. “We are extremely proud of the program we have built at Barnard over the last twen-

“We are not abandoning our young people, our youth, who need help.” —Vivian Taylor, vice president for community development ty-plus years and very much regret having to take this action,” Taylor wrote in the email. “However, the ongoing unreliability of New York’s financial support for Liberty and a serious lack of functionality at the state level leave us with little option.” The program—the proposal for which was written by Taylor herself in 1989—was initially funded by the New York State Education Department,

SEE LIBERTY, page 2

Portugal’s PM touts alternative energy progress BY AARON KIERSH Spectator Senior Staff Writer Portugal’s Prime Minister José Sócrates celebrated his country’s achievements in reducing dependence on fossil fuels and developing alternative energy sources during a Low Library Rotunda address Thursday evening. This World Leaders Forum program, titled “Energy Policy and the Portuguese New Growth Agenda,” drew a capacity crowd—part of a week in which several heads of state visited Columbia.

10-minute chunks per month. After that, the service will cost 99 cents for each day. It may be a while before students can decide whether this wireless plan is worth their dollar. According to Eddie Borges, spokesperson for the city’s Department of Information Technology and Telecommunications, the borough presidents and cable companies will begin the process of choosing which parks will get wireless in the first quarter of 2011. For now, it’s unclear whether either Morningside or Riverside parks will be among the lucky ones. Before the changes can officially take off, formal requests must be made,” Borges said, adding that by the end of 2010, the project will be started. Time Warner Cable and

SEE WIFI, page 2

years became no longer financially sustainable.

Sócrates focused on the “pragmatism” and “strategy” of his administration’s economic and energy policies. Sócrates, introduced by School of International and Public Affairs Dean John Coatsworth, repeatedly stressed the links between developing renewable fuels, “going green,” and strengthening Portuguese society. Unlike some other speakers this week, Sócrates rarely mentioned his nation’s place on the European scene

SEE WLF, page 2

KATE SCARBROUGH FOR SPECTATOR

HEADS OF STATE | Portugal’s Prime Minister José Sócrates spoke at Columbia on Thursday, discussing Portugal’s progress.

OPINION, PAGE 4

SPORTS, PAGE 6

EVENTS

WEATHER

Lone Leaders Forum

Football season continues Saturday

Geoengineering the Climate

Today

The Lions will play their second home game in a four-game streak this weekend against Towson. The Tigers bring athleticism and experience to the table against the Light Blue.

As part of Climate Week NYC, the Columbia Climate Center will present a talk on the ethics and politics of geoengineering. Satow Room, Lerner Hall, 2 p.m.

Rhonda Shafei argues that a country’s forum includes more than one leader.

Tomorrow

85 °/ 69 ° 82 °/ 56 °


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