The Ithacan APOCALYPSE NOW? Thursday, December 13, 20 12
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Volume 80 , Is s u e 1 4
While some brace for the end, others embrace the hype
The spread of the black plague affected 25 to 50 percent of Europe’s population. The large number of the deaths caused people to think the world was ending.
To interact with this timeline, visit theithacan.org/ interactive/doomsday.
1346-1351 By elma gonzalez and kelsey o'Connor
news editor and editor in chief
The countdown has begun. It’s not to the end of finals but potentially to the end of the world. Some have predicted, based on the conclusion of the Mayan calendar cycle, that the world may come to an end in eight days, on Dec. 21, 2012. While some are bracing for the potential apocalypse, many are working to discredit the theory. Around the world, some are bracing for what is believed to be the world's end on Dec. 21. In western Turkey, thousands are pouring into a small village where Christians believe the Virgin Mary ascended to heaven. In the U.S., some believers are ready to run to sophisticated underground bunkers to survive a possible catastrophe.
Christopher Columbus claimed the world would last 7,000 years. Assuming it was created in 5343 BCE, the end of the world would fall in 1658.
Global econo mic chaos would come from the Y2K compute r bug and the Antichrist would use it to rise to p ower.
Y2K
At Ithaca College, some professors have brought doomsday discussions to the classroom. Ron Denson, assistant professor of writing, has taught the honors course, “2012: The End of Time,” for four years. His class focuses on Mayan culture and the famous calendar that ends in 2012 and has managed to spook — at least a little — an entire generation. “There is this sort of inchoate fear that the end of the world is happening, and [students] don’t quite know where that sense comes from,” Denson said. Michael Richardson, associate professor of modern languages and literatures, teaches the freshman Ithaca seminar, “Disaster and Dystopia and the End of the World.” “There’s always a perverse sort of fascination with the end of the world, and some of that comes from a dissatisfaction with the way that society or civilization as a whole is headed,” Richardson said.
2012
Galactic alignment and the end of the Mayan calendar are a few of the many prophecies supported for the much anticipated Dec. 21, 2012.
2000
1658
DEC. 21,
This is not the first time the world has been prophesied to end. There have been more than 150 predicted apocalypses. On Dec. 21, 1954, according to a UFO cult, the Brotherhood of Seven Rays, a flood was supposed to destroy the world. On Jan. 1, 2000, the Y2K computer bug was supposed to cause global chaos. If all doesn’t fail next week, there are more future dates. According to Jeanne Dixon, a 20th-century astrologer, Armageddon will take place between 2020 and 2037. This year, some people are expecting a planet or brown dwarf called Nibiru, Planet X or Eris to hit planet Earth, which
See doom, page 4 Design by Emily Fuller
Rochon adds student input to budget talks by emily masters staff writer
President Tom Rochon will temporarily add two student representatives to the Institutional Effectiveness and Budget Committee this year —for the first time at Ithaca College — to give input on where the college should allocate its funds. Along with this change, two additional staff members will be added to the IEBC ROCHON said it's for the course of important to have the Huron Educa- students involved tion Consulting with the review. review, which will assess ways to reduce costs, spend college funds more efficiently and improve revenue and service. This is in addition to the 21 members of IEBC, three of whom are staff and two are faculty members, Rochon said. “This temporary addition of students
See Budget, page 4
Residential Life to implement housing changes by candace king assistant news editor
With IC 20/20 moving forward, the Office of Residential Life is altering its current housing arrangements and process to coincide with the First-Year Residential Experience. These changes will include the elimination of Terrace 6 and Terrace 9 suites, remodeling the housing application process and the addition of the option to buy out an entire double in the event of a vacancy. Beginning next semester, Residential Life will be moving forward with its plans to require first-year students to live in the First-Year Residential Experience. By 2014, this initiative is expected to be in full effect. Locations of the FYRE have not been finalized yet. With new resident halls to be sectioned off for freshman, Linda Koenig, assistant director for housing services and communications, said they are eliminating some of the suites in the Terraces to create more space for upperclassmen. A Terrace suite consists of a sixperson or a five-person mini-apartment. They have a triple room and
Acting out
Student theater group performs controversial shows, page 13
Junior Marissa Osowsky, president of the Residence Hall Association, acts as a liaison during her weekly meetings with Residential Life. Candace king/The ithacan
a double room positioned around a common living room. Some suites come with balconies and have a private bathroom. For each suite that is converted, that frees up space for two doubles and one single. There are 24 suites in the Terraces residential area. Beginning next semester, Terrace 6 and Terrace 9 will no longer
have suites. There are four suites in those Terraces. This elimination will increase the amount of living space such as doubles and triples for sophomores while increasing the amount of singles for juniors and seniors. Junior Marissa Osowsky, president of the Residence Hall Association, said the elimination
of suites also comes as a result of National Survey of Residence Hall Student Satisfaction survey conducted by residential life in March, which showed that juniors and seniors are typically interested in those spaces. “What they found in surveys that they’ve performed over the years is that juniors and seniors prefer that kind of housing and sophomores prefer doubles,” Osowsky said. “They want to give people what they want.” Other reasons for this decision is the difficulty in filling the triples and frequency of room damage complaints and behavioral complaints from Terraces suites, Koenig said. Sophomore Jordan Darkow lives in a suite in Terrace 4. When moving into the suite, Darkow said there were damages, such as dents in the doors and stains on the curtains. Darkow said he made the decision to live in the suites because it served as an alternative to living in an apartment with friends. “We heard upperclassmen
See Housing, page 4
Splash shot
close to home
Local underwater hockey club sets sights on new facilities, page 19
College must focus on campus during budget talks, page 10
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