ithaca colleges
Ithaca Colleges Scramble to Cut Costs as They Confront Uncertain Future
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Ithaca College and Tompkins Cortland Community College have already made some tough logistical and financial decisions.
The Cornell Daily Sun (https://cornellsun.com/tag/ithaca-college/page/2/)
Ithaca College and Tompkins Cortland Community College have already made some tough logistical and financial decisions.
Dozens of demonstrators gathered outside the Tompkins County Court on Monday to call for the release of Ithaca resident Nagee Green, who was sentenced to 20 years in prison in 2017 for fatally stabbing Ithaca College student Anthony Nazaire on Cornell’s campus.
“When I first saw her, it was like ‘oh my god, she’s alive,’ because, on the way down, I honestly expected she wouldn’t be,” Grant said.
Ithaca College is severing its nine-year long partnership with Cornell in Washington — beginning in spring 2020, IC students will no longer be able to participate in CIW. IC withdrew from the partnership, citing concerns over program costs.
“When [Father] McMullin read the letter from the diocese, the church was silent,” Elise Viz ’22 said. “Nobody knew what to say.”
Kelly Anne Perkins, a 19-year-old Ithaca College freshman, died in a two-vehicle car crash on Monday in Caroline, N.Y., according to an Tompkins County press release.
Ithaca College Public Safety staff were unable to stop the jumping and, in turn, ended the performance.
“There was a cabaret and there was a master of ceremonies and there was a city called Berlin in a country called Germany. It was the end of the world…” So writes Cliff Bradshaw, the starry-eyed American novelist whose search for love and adventure in 1930s Germany frames John Kander and Fred Ebbs’s Cabaret. In the haze of the Kit Kat Klub, a haven for stockings, lipstick, and high-heeled performers, Berlin is in full-view, beautiful in its celebration of self and doomed by the rising political waves that would ultimately engulf Europe. Ithaca College’s production of Cabaret was an astounding success, executed with masterful design, orchestration, choreography and particularly amazing talent. Designed to bring the audience into the nightclub, with red “Ausgang” signs, dim lights and the orchestra dressed as a cabaret band, Clark Theatre brought the tantalizing Kit Kat Girls and Gals as close to the audience as possible.
Ithaca College students will perform Giovanni Battista Pergolesi’s “Stabat Mater” at a charity concert to raise money for Catholic Charities of Tompkins/Tioga’s Immigrant Services Program, an organization that helps resettle refugees in Ithaca.
“The philosophy of resource sharing is getting these materials to people no matter where they are,” said Caitlin Finlay, Director of Interlibrary Services.