The Ithacan Th ursday, M ay 2, 20 13
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Volume 80 , Issu e 2 8
Committing to memory
College remembers departed student with sci-fi challenge
City debates lease changes by sage daugherty staff writer
studied at the Ithaca College London Center. She also worked for local favorite Purity Ice Cream and Ithaca College Dining Services, and she was a dedicated member of the college’s Harry Potter Alliance. Katharine Kittredge, professor of English and one of the advisers of the Tori Cup, said
Like clockwork, the crazy rush to find housing and re-sign leases on South Hill and in Collegetown begins every August and September. However, an ordinance is on the table to potentially mitigate the process. The Ithaca Common Council is considering an ordinance that would enact a 60-day waiting period before landlords could look for new tenants or renew leases with current tenants. The 60-day period can be waived if both the landlord and tenant agree in writing to bypass the waiting period. Supporters of the ordinance said if passed, the proposal would give students and other renters time to settle into their apartments and see if they are satisfied with their current living situation before facing the decision to renew their lease for the upcoming school year. Graham Kerslick, common council liaison to the Rental Housing Advisory Commission and representative of the Fourth Ward, drafted the proposal after consulting with officials in Ann Arbor, Mich., who enacted a similar ordinance in response to complaints by students at the University of Michigan. The Ann Arbor legislation has a fixed waiting period of 70 days. Kerslick
See howell, page 4
See leases, page 3
Senior Ashlyn Velte, coordinator of the Tori Cup, hosts a practice session of the sci-fi challenge last Thursday, as members of team Science Fiction Whiz Kids, seniors Kyle Riether, Sarah Perry and Rachel Rothenberg, and junior Calvin Chestnut, help test the buzzer system that will be used for the event. noreyana fernando/the ithacan
by noreyana fernando assistant news editor
Four months after Ithaca College junior Victoria “Tori” Howell died in a car accident, the college is revisiting and celebrating Howell’s life by celebrating her passion for all things fantasy and science fiction. The college will host the inaugural Tori Cup: Fantasy and Science Fiction Challenge
on Friday, when teams of students from local middle schools, high schools and colleges will come together to test their knowledge of sci-fi and fantasy. The Tori Cup is named in honor of Howell, 20, who died after being rushed to the hospital following the Dec. 30 car accident in Dryden. Howell was an English major with a minor in psychology. During the fall of 2011, she
Public Safety hosts venue for discussion by kelsey o'connor editor in chief
Anti-Semitic graffiti was discovered in East Tower on April 21.
Jacob greenberg/the ithacan
Anti-Semitism hits East Tower by jacob greenberg contributing writer
Two members of Alpha Epsilon Pi, an international Jewish fraternity, woke on April 21 to find “666,” “Heil
Hitler” and a swastika in dripping red paint defacing their door. Though the occupants
See door, page 4
Year in review The Ithacan's annual recap has officially hit stands across campus.
It’s no secret that half the reason people pick up The Ithacan is to read the Public Safety Log, either looking for names of friends or just to muse over the Explore logs strangest crimes from this past of the week. academic year Looking back at psl.theithaat the past aca- can.org demic year, some of the most common occurrences reported in the Public Safety Log were fire alarms, criminal mischief, larceny, medical assists and found property. To keep the community aware of trends in incidents on campus, this week The Ithacan launched a searchable Public Safety Log database, a new ongoing interactive that is more accessible than the weekly list of logs on page nine. It is sortable by crime, date and location and will be updated weekly. Also this week, in what might be the first of many opportunities for dialogue, the Office of Public Safety held an open forum, titled Conversations With Public Safety, where students could ask anything
The Office of Public Safety along with other organizations held a forum Tuesday where students could ask questions and have a dialogue with safety officials. tucker mitchell/the ithacan
to college safety officials. The event was a partnership among Students for Sensible Drug Policy, the Student Government Association and the Center for Health Promotion. Questions of how crimes are classified, student privacy, the Clery Act and why Public Safety discloses the amount of information it does were put on the table. On Tuesday, about 25 people attended the informal forum to speak
Heritage Game Men's lax assistant coach connects to culture through sport, page 23. f ind m or e onl ine. www.t heit hacan.org
with officials in attendance, including Terri Stewart, director of public safety and emergency management; Investigator Tom Dunn; Mike Leary, assistant director of judicial affairs; two patrol officers: Bill Kerry and Brad Bates; Nancy Reynolds, Health Promotion Center director; and three members of Student Auxiliary
See SAFETY, page 4
lit magazine
Check out our special edition of narrative works by senior journalists.