2-5-13 CAYUGA COLLEGE

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Cayuga Community College Auburn & Fulton, New York

Collegian Vol. 61 Issue 10

PHOTO BY ABIGAIL YOUNG

CAYUGABriefs

Amy Valente

By Alec Rider, editor-in-chief

CCC business professor Amy Valente has been accepted to a fellowship of the National Association for Community College Entrepreneurship (NACCE). Professor Valente will help design and create online training programs for NACCE’s “How to Do It” kit and the NACCE “Quick Start Guides,” which assist community colleges in understanding how to implement entrepreneurship education programs. Valente – the adviser of CCC’s chapter of the Phi Beta Lambda (PBL) business club— was given the J. Richard Mahlstedt award by the students of CCC for excellence in her area of expertise and focus on ongoing learning last May. She started at CCC in 2010 and teaches everything from Principles of Business to Event Planning. Valente will also be organizing SUNY ENGINE a SUNY-wide Entrepreneurship Education symposium on 4/19 in Auburn to bring together SUNY educators and administrators.

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Cayuga Collegian editor-in-chief, Alec Rider (foreground table), takes time out of his busy schedule to participate in the Auburn campus Student Government Organization’s blood drive for the American Red Cross.

Wampum at Cayuga Museum By Jim Granger, staff writer On December 18, 2012 there was an event that many people do not see, read or maybe even hear about especially in the Central New York Area. A press conference was held by the Cayuga Museum’s Theater Mack to present the Cayuga Museum with a replica of a wampum belt that was formerly in the museum’s collection. The wampum belt was a replica of one of two belts given back to the Onondaga Nation. There was another belt and 19 masks. The belts and masks had been in the museum’s collection for many years. The two wampum belts were from an unknown burial site. The wampum replica was made as a gesture of goodwill by the Onondaga Nation. The 1990 Federal Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) mandates that federally funded museums return Native American “cultural items” to the lineal descendants or culturallyaffiliated groups of the people who created them. The cultural objects covered include human remains,

funerary objects, sacred objects and other important objects to Native Americans. The Cayuga Museum is not federally funded but decided two wampum belts from their collection and an assortment of 19 masks which could not be displayed at the museum be returned to the Onondaga Nation, where the Iroquois council fire resides. The Onondagas are at the heart of the confederacy. Cayuga Museum Curator Lauren Chyle said, “They were things we could not ethically display”. Chyle went on to say, “We decided that repatriation was the best thing to do.” Many people may think wampum was used by Native Americans and European traders as payment for goods. Wampum is actually used to tell a story. The wampum formally from the museum’s collection was from a grave discovered around or before 1900. Chyle stated “Very little documentation exists because records were not as well kept in

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SGO Drive Collects a Record Amount of Blood By Abigail Young, assistant editor

PHOTO BY JIM GRANGER

CCC’s Amy Valente Earns Fellowship

February 5, 2013

Congratulations to the Auburn Campus Student Government Organization (SGO)! They set an all-time high record of donations during their recent blood drive for the American Red Cross last week. American Red Cross representative Roberta Kryk says the SGO’s original goal was to collect 34 to 37 units of blood. When the drive was over, Kryk reports they had collected 63 units, which she says is enough to save 189 lives! The blood drive was planned in celebration of National Blood Donor month in January. Students who made a donation of a pint of blood received a voucher for a free pound of Dunkin’ Donuts coffee. The event was hosted in the student lounge where Red Cross nurses Cayuga Collegian and Student editor-in-chief, G o v e r n m e n t Alec Rider is officials worked holding his Pint together to help for a Pound of with the event. “Thus far coffee certificate. we have 20 appointments scheduled, but we expect more walk-ins,” explained Auburn campus Student Government treasurer, Kevin Franceschelli during the height of their busy time. Dunkin’ Donuts Field Marketing Manager, Lou Conte, says his company was happy to provide the incentive. “We hope the offer of a free pound of Dunkin’ Donuts coffee will encourage more blood donors at this crucial time and help save more lives.” In 1970, the American Red Cross created National Blood Donor month. The Red Cross chose January because they believed many people’s New Year’s resolutions include helping others, and one way of doing this is through simply giving blood. One pint of blood can help up to three people, says the Red Cross. If you missed this blood drive, and want to know about others in the area, visit www.redcrossblood.org/giveblood, and enter your zip code to find a convenient location.

THE VOICE OF THE STUDENTS OF CAYUGA COMMUNITY COLLEGE FOR MORE THAN 50 YEARS

PHOTO BY ABIGAIL YOUNG

www.cayugacollegian.com


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