Tenants, Landlords Talk Trash
Transcription
Tenants, Landlords Talk Trash
www.tompkinsweekly.com Locally Owned & Operated Your source for local news & events By Anne Marie Cummings Living the simple life, and living green ........page 2 Bus route change draws parents’ concern ........page 3 Library Lovers have reason to celebrate ..........page 4 Opinion and letters page 6 On Cornell stage, life is a cabaret ..........................page 9 FREE Tenants, Landlords Talk Trash By Anne Marie Cummings Weeks ago, Kristen Kennedy, a distraught 21year-old senior at Cornell, appeared before Common Council. In her allotted three minutes, Kennedy addressed some of the challenges that many college students are going through today: being asked by landlords to pay half a semester’s rent along with their security deposit up front, and living in unkempt apartments. But her main reason for being there, she said, was a stack of garbage fines handed to her by her landlord almost two months after the tickets were issued. Garbage fines range from $50 for a first offense to $200 for the second offense and $300 for a third offense. Kennedy notes that she and her roommates received a $300 fine for their first garbage offense (a ticket issued on Nov. 13). Several weeks later, with five more garbage fines accumulated, they were notified by their landlord and property owner, Nick Lambrou, that they owed a total of $1,800. “My roommates and I didn’t even know that we were being fined repeatedly for uncovered garbage containers,” said Kennedy. “Had we received the tickets right after they were issued, we would have been more aware of the situation and we would have held a house meeting to make sure it didn’t happen again. We could have just paid our first fine, learned our lesson and avoided more fines.” These days garbage fines are mailed from the City of Ithaca to landlords and property owners. Previously garbage fines were given directly to the tenants, but collecting fines proved to be a challenge since many students left town before paying their fines. So a number of landlords, like Lambrou, state on their leases that tenants will be held responsible for paying garbage fines. In Singing for Haiti Photo by Kathy Morris ALSO IN THIS ISSUE… Volume 4, No. 19 • February 8-14, 2010 Samite of Uganda, right, and Richie Sterns, along with bassist Nate Richardson, played a benefit concert at Gimme! Coffee in Ithaca last Wednesday night. The trio played many of Samite's signature songs and instrumentals, and closed with the Horse Flies’ “Baghdad Children.” The concert, sponsored by 98.7 Radio The vine and produced by Ron Brancini of BSI Productions, raised nearly $1,000 for Save the Children’s relief effort in Haiti. addition, some landlords specify how tenants should handle their weekly garbage tasks.’ Appearing before council with Kennedy was Joyce Muchan, a volunteer board member of the Rental Housing Advisory Board for the City of Ithaca who has been working on this issue for 10 years. She strongly advocates a community-run landlord/tenant storefront in Ithaca so that renters have a place to go if they have questions and concerns that need to be addressed. “Nobody is in disagreement with having penalties for garbage that hasn’t been properly taken care of,” said Muchan, “but if landlords are not telling tenants that they are collecting recurring fees, then the system isn’t working, and on top of that there’s no redress for the students.” Lambrou stated that the problem is not between landlords and tenants, but rather it is the law that’s been written by Common Council. “It’s against the tenants,” he said. “Not only are these fines disproportionate to the offense at times, but I have expressed numerous times to the city prosecutor that this is completely unfair to the students.” Please turn to page 11 Local Historians Find Fellowship By Patricia Brhel Film takes a peek behind Historian Victoria’s secret ........page 10 Groton In Business Weekly: Tompkins airport bucks the trend with more passengers ..............................page 11 Time to get growing with native plants ..............page 14 Rosemarie Tucker quips, “Time flies when you’re having fun,” in describing the 10 years that the Municipal Historians of Tompkins County (MHTC) have been meeting. During these monthly sessions they’ve shared information about their towns, exchanged tips on how to research history and developed friendships that have deepened over the years. Though joint projects and the income generated by such projects they’ve also been able to help members attend statewide meetings of the Association of Public Historians of New York State (APNYS). Tucker remembers, “I had just been appointed deputy historian for Groton when the town historian resigned and I ended up with her job. I had a lot to learn in a hurry. Fortunately, the people involved with MHTC were very friendly and helpful. They had already started revising “Place Names of Tompkins County” and it was a great experience. I learned a lot more about Groton while doing that project.” Since then MHTC has finished two more big projects, the driving brochures for each town in the county, such as “Destination Groton,” and the book “Tompkins County New York, Images of Work and Play.” There is also a Web site, which can be found at www.tompkins-co.org/historian. Tucker has used the writing experience gained with her co-authors as an incentive for her own book, publishing “Images of America: Groton” in 2009. She dedicated the book to her high school history teacher, LaVena Court. “I really wasn’t interested in history when I was in high school,” she recalls, “But I really liked Ms. Court. She told me that I would enjoy it later and she was right. Of course if we’d had more local history and fewer dates to memorize I might have gotten interested sooner. It’s the stories of people that get me excited. I find them fascinating.” Barbara Kone, historian for the Town of Caroline, agrees. “All history,” she is fond of saying, “is really the story of people.” Kone still lives in the town where she grew up, making it a little easier, perhaps, to remember her fellow residents’ stories. If she needs help her father, William Mix, is still a valuable resource. Though well into his 90s, he still recalls which family lived where and remembers who nailed the teacher’s shoes to the floor. Tucker looks forward to the upcoming APNYS conference in Buffalo and a conference on New York State history at Ithaca College in early June. She also expects that the upcoming anniversaries will renew interest in history. “It will be the 150th anniversary of the start of the Civil War next year and the 200th anniversary of the War of 1812 the following year, she says. “The Town of Groton will be celebrating an anniversary, and in 2015 the First National Bank of Groton will turn 150.” New York State takes the past seriously. Every town, village, city and county in New York State is mandated by law to have a public historian. While many government bodies do give their historian office space and at least a small stipend, the law doesn’t demand that the historian be paid, or even that office space be granted. There are no educational standards and while each town council or county board can decide the scope of the work, they often leave it up to their appointed historian. For the most part, local historians actively seek out the job because they are truly interested in the subject. APNYS has literature and workshops at their conferences, the History Center of Tompkins County and MHTC have information available. Please turn to page 14 Living Simply, and Living Green They had a shared dream for 16 years, and in the summer of 2008 Everett Boutillet and Louis Johnson moved out of their 10room Victorian house into a 27-foot yurt to live with nature. They have accomplished that with a lifestyle that is rugged and simple. It’s a hike of about one-third of a mile through the woods from where they park, to the yurt, which is on a hill in the middle of a forest in the Town of Danby with magnificent views. Their constant companions are the wind, deer and hopefully the sun, to shine down on their solar panels. They are off the grid, with a hand-pump on a 180-foot well, which proves to be a good workout for water, a woodstove they use for heat and cooking, a composting toilet and a 1.2KW PV (photovoltaic) electrical system with battery storage. Even in winter the six solar panels generate enough power that they have never needed nor used a generator. They use their microwave and toaster only on very sunny days. As Boutillet and Johnson welcome a visitor into their yurt, Everett offers a selection of tea while his long-time partner, Louis, serves homemade focaccia bread fresh from the oven decorated with chunks of garlic they grew and pine nuts Everett’s sister harvested. Their hospitality is like the home they keep: simple, useful, but not barren of character. The two men always wanted to build an earth shelter, and when they researched yurts they liked 2 Tompkins Weekly February 8 Photo by Kitty Hall-Thurnheer By Kitty Hall-Thurnheer Everett Boutillet and Louis Johnson relax in the yurt they call home, located in Danby. the idea and purchased one from the Colorado Yurt Company. It sits upon a round wooden base with 10 inches of insulation, held off the ground by pressure-treated posts. Forty-five friends showed up the day of their yurt raising. The outside wall frame is a lattice construction that expands accordion style. “It was like a giant playpen,” they recall. Two-by-fours reinforce the walls, an add-on for the high winds they experience living on a hill. All the wood is stained and exposed. Long beams make the ceiling, reaching from the wall to the peak, connecting to the circular frame of the skylight. The wood frame is covered with canvas, including zip-out windows and a standard wood door. Because they chose to live in their yurt year-round, they ordered insulated walls consisting of canvas over metallic-covered bubble wrap, which provides a surprisingly toasty shelter. “The hardest thing about moving into the yurt was getting rid of our stuff,” Johnson says. They used eBay, Craigslist, the Salvation Army and a once-a-year-anything-goes garbage pickup day held by their town, but usually their stuff was picked up and reused before the garbage truck arrived. “And selling our house,” Boutillet adds, “It took a long time.” The yurt has a wall down the middle with the living space a bit more than half, and the back part providing unheated storage, a workshop, the inverter and batteries, clothes storage and refrigerator and freezer units, both DC, using less electricity than AC units. The front of the yurt is open, with a woodstove, living room and kitchen table. Their bed is a loft supported by the center wall, and allows them a fantastic view of rain, snow, and stars through the skylight over their heads, which also opens for fresh air. The kitchen is under the loft overhang and has innovative shelves installed on the underneath side of the overhang, each can and box neatly visible for easy access. A reused French door (to maximize light) leads to a bathroom with a composting toilet and a shower stall with a gravity-fed shower. They proudly pull down the five gallon bucket to show the spigot they installed. They heat their water on the woodstove and in the spring they plan to construct a solar batch hot water heater for summer use. They use environmentally-friendly natural cleaners and have learned to use very little water. Their home is cozy and free of clutter, everything meaningful, Johnson explains while showing the afghan he crocheted. “It was a real eye opener to see how much we were consumers,” he says. “We don’t bring stuff home anymore,” Boutillet adds, “unless we know exactly where it’s going to go and what it’s going to be used for.” They stay current with news on a large screen TV and an outdoor antenna. “Sometimes we come home and run to check the inverter to see if we have enough power to watch a movie,” Boutillet says. They laugh with guilty pleasure. “Will we ever go back to conventional living?” They posed the question themselves, both shaking their heads simultaneously. “No, absolutely not.” By Tina Wright Parents are protesting a route change that sends TCAT buses into a busy intersection at the back parking lot of Cayuga Heights Elementary School. Children who walk to school and those being dropped off and picked up already face safety challenges in this congested area, say some parents and other village residents who voiced their concerns at a TCAT Board of Director’s meeting on Jan. 28. Parent Suzanne VanDeMark says, “Route 30 comes through that intersection, which is the back entrance to the school, 86 times a day. The problem is that many children walk to school and it increases the risk of a child getting hurt.” Some 100 children are dropped off and picked up daily and they all walk through this intersection, according to parents, and 60-70 school employees enter and leave the back parking lot within a small window of time. The issue cropped up after TCAT launched a new streamlined route system last month. This was the culmination of two years of planning, consulting and public hearings. But Cayuga Heights residents were surprised when the Route 30 bus began taking Northway Road instead of East Upland, swinging by the school’s back lot on Jan. 17. VanDeMark claims that neither officials at the elementary school, nor the village police and the neighborhood, were informed about the route change, which she finds “thoughtless and unacceptable.” Nancy Oltz, manager of service development for TCAT, responds that the new Route 30 path taking Northway Road has been on the TCAT Web site since May as part of the transit development plan. There’s a back story here. VanDeMark explains that two years ago TCAT started running the Route 30 bus down Northway Road. “We had several people sign a petition that we presented to TCAT. So they were aware that many people from the whole community and the neighborhood were upset about this change,” she says. Parent Michele Kiefer led the effort, collecting 158 signatures. TCAT relented in fall 2007. Last spring TCAT held public hearings after a major study by a transportation consulting company, Perteet Inc., helped the transit company put together a more streamlined routing system. The Route 30 bus route presented at that time was fine with these Cayuga Heights residents. “As we were watching this during the public input, it did not have the Route 30 bus coming through the intersection,” VanDeMark says. “in fact, it was a much better route because Route 30 went all the way down Triphammer Road from Community Corners to Cornell, which makes more sense since it is clearly more of a thoroughfare.” After the public hearing period, TCAT made modifications to recommended route changes, most of them minor, but the Route 30 bus route switched to Northway Road, rather than East Upland Road (which was the former route) or Triphammer Road (the recommended route at the public hearings). Photo by Tina Wright Bus Route Change Draws Protests This isthe busy intersection at back parking lot of Cayuga Heights Elementary School. Local parents are concerned that TCAT sends buses through the intersection 86 times a day. VanDeMark says, “So they made these huge changes in these modifications and there was no opportunity for public input on these changes.” In response, TCAT’s Oltz states, “We decided to change to Northway due to the fact that it’s a better road, a better turn. It’s shorter, it’s straighter and it’s not as much of an incline to get onto Triphammer Road.” Oltz says the route change was included in two documents posted in May on the TCAT Web site. “One is the recommendations made from our consultant from Perteet who performed a study of our services. And then there was a second document called ‘modifications to the route recommendations,’” she explains. “We had other meetings going on at the same time, meetings with staff, meetings with stakeholders, more information that came from public comment. These were the sources of information that we came up with for the modifications.” Oltz emphasizes the competence of TCAT drivers and their good safety record. “We didn’t feel it was an issue having the buses go by the school because it’s what we do, it’s how we serve the community.” Patrick Jensen, principal of Cayuga Heights Elementary, sent his concerns with VanDeMark to the TCAT meeting. He worries about the congestion pedestrians and vehicles create near the school. Local residents also point out another dangerous hidden intersection on the bus route where Northway meets Midway Road. Both VanDeMark and Oltz agree that the matter is not closed. At the TCAT meeting, board president Frank Proto referred the Route 30 controversy to the board’s Transit Services Committee for further consideration. ECK Worship Service February 21, 2010 11 a.m. Best Western University Inn, East Hill Plaza, Ithaca Topic: “A Capacity to Change” Reading from spiritual text, Singing HU, Discussion of topic. Opportunity for all to share love of God. Public Invited, Families Welcome Info. 800-749-7791 www.eckankar.org Sponsored by New York Satsang Society Inc. Chartered affiliate of ECKANKAR Tompkins Weekly February 8 3 Library Lovers Celebrate Joys of Reading For the second year in a row throughout the month of February, the Tompkins County Public Library (TCPL) is holding a series of events called “Library Lovers Month,” joined by city booksellers who are hosting events and offering special sales vouchers for the main event, the Feb. 12-15 Book Fai rfundraiser. Participating stores this year are Autumn Leaves, Barnes & Noble, The Bookery, Borders, Buffalo Street Books, Colophon Books, Comics for Collectors and the Cornell Store. Live entertainment including music from the Ithaca Community Orchestra, visits from Clifford the Big Red Dog, storytimes and readings are scheduled to take place at the stores over the weekend. Executive Director Suzanne Smith Jablonski describes the TCPL Foundation’s role, saying, “Our sole mission when we were formed in 1993 was to be the fundraising arm of the library. Since then we’ve evolved and expanded and our biggest project to date has been getting funds together for renovating our building and revamping downtown’s TCPL and help make it what it is today.” This is the second year that Library Lover’s Month is taking place at TCPL, she adds. “We’re grateful to the people who’ve become involved and their work in what we hope will become a long tradition. They include Elissa Cogan, Sally Grubb and Julie Johnson, among others. “They’ve been an integral part of what we do Photo by Ann Krajewski By Ann Krajewski Suzanne Smith Jablonski of the Library Foundation has joined forces with local bookstores for Library Lovers Month events. here.” The Book Fair, as the centerpiece of Library Lover’s Month, will take place at the above named merchants from Friday through Monday. In using the sales vouchers when they make a purchase, shoppers will help raise funds for the librar. The vouchers can be used to purchase many goods, including general merchandise. In the case of Barnes & Noble, this promotion is nationwide. Jablonski says, “If you have family or friends outside of town and you e-mail them a voucher from the TCPL site and there’s a Barnes & Noble near them, they can contribute, too.” Library Lover’s Month activities will primarily be held on the extended holiday weekend. However, a noteworthy event will take place at the library on Saturday, Feb. 27, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. when Cornell’s Panhellenic Association (the university’s group of sororities) will turn library patrons into celebrities. Sorority volunteers will take photos of individuals and digitally reproduce them on one of the backgrounds of the famous “READ” ads. The ads typically feature a famous person, whether it’s from the entertainment or sports world, extolling the virtues of reading and of course, visiting your local library. Jablonski has a poster of actress/comedienne Whoopie Goldberg in a recent READ advertisement. “I am hoping the READ posters will become a popular part of future Library Lover’s events,” she sayd. A $5 donation for each poster is suggested. The participating merchants also have offerings during this weekend of Valentine’s Day, Presidents Day and the Chinese New Year to make this a series of events that they hope will attract customers of all ages. Gary Weissbrot owns Buffalo Street Books and laughs at his exactor’s background when describing his store’s ongoing storytimes for pre-schoolers which will be part of the Library Lover’s events. “I have to make all the voices and the faces when I read to the kids. I do storytime on a regular basis for three- to five-year-olds and let me tell you, they can be a tough crowd, but the perks are great. I get drawings and paintings and once I even received a buffalo hat. I get to stretch my acting chops!” Joe Wetmore, owner of Autumn Leaves on the Commons, is also enthusiastic about his participation in the Library Lover’s events. “I’m among a lot of people who support the library and appreciate how we work togethe,” he says. “The Library Lover’s event is something I hope our community stays involved with for a long time.” For vouchers, a schedule of events or other information call 272-4557 or visit www.tcpl.org/foundation. The Ithaca Youth Bureau offers year round recreation programs for youth and families in the City of Ithaca and surrounding areas. We offer programs like: summer day camps, sport leagues and lessons, theatre classes, pottery classes and more. Please help us plan for the future by taking our on-line survey at: http://www.surveymonkey.com/iybrecreationsurvey Respond by April 2nd to be included in our drawings for free pizzas. If you'd prefer a hard copy of the survey, have questions or need assistance completing the survey, please contact Cristina Munk at 273-8364. 4 Tompkins Weekly February 8 For Boy Scouts, 100 Years of Being Prepared By Tompkins Weekly Staff While the Boy Scouts of America (BSA) celebrates its centennial on Feb. 8, the BSA’s National Office has awarded the Baden-Powell Council, serving the greater Binghamton/Ithaca area, with the Quality Council Award, which recognizes Boy Scouts councils that have an outstanding program in all areas of performance. In 2009, for the fourth consecutive year, despite a declining youth population in the Southern Tier and Central New York, the Boy Scouting program here posted a gain in membership that was the second best in the Northeastern U.S., balanced its budget and had a major increase in the number of boy and girls attending summer camp. Last year a total of 77 young men in the Baden-Powell Council were awarded the Eagle Scout Award, the highest youth award presented by the BSA. The Baden-Powell Council formed 11years ago when the Binghamton office merged with the Ithaca office to form its current sixcounty area in New York and Pennsylvania. The council is named after Sir Robert BadenPowell, who founded the Scouting movement in England 102 years ago. The Baden-Powell Council served 8,331 youth members in 2009 and ran a budget of just over $1,330,000 of which almost 12 percent came from the support of the United Way. The remainder of the funding comes from activity fees and charitable contributions from businesses, foundations and individuals. When the Boy Scouts of America was officially incorporated on Feb. 8, 1910, Americans were driving Stanley steam automobiles, earning an average of $750 a year, and paying little more than 30 cents for a gallon of milk. While all of these things seem out of place today, the BSA remains a vital organization with a mission and purpose that remains relevant. Throughout 2010, Scouts will gather in their communities to pay tribute to the history and tradition of Scouting. Locally, this spring the Baden-Powell Council will conduct a community tree planting pro- gram to plant a 100th Anniversary Tree in every community that has a Scouting program in the six-county area. Over the next several monthsmany national and local 100th anniversary engagement programs have been designed to reintroduce Scouting to the next generation of young leaders and reconnect millions of alumni with the organization as the Boy Scouts launch their second century of service. “We are truly blessed to have the generous support of many volunteers and donors who help us provide a high caliber of scouting programs to area youth,” Stephen Hoitt, Executive Director of the Baden-Powell Council, said in a statement. Tompkins Weekly February 8 5 Opinion Wine Sales Bill Poses Many Problems By Dana Malley Recently, the president of Irondequoit Liquor, Joe Pecoraro, issued a letter to fellow liquor store owners that brilliantly exposes the phony “compromise” Governor Paterson has in store for liquor stores statewide in his renewed bid to allow grocery stores to sell wine. (To request a copy e-mail sybarite@nor thsidewine.com.) Upon reading it, I couldn’t help but wonder what life would be like if New York supermarkets, gas stations, convenience stores and bodegas began carrying wine. For one thing, more delivery trucks would be required — a lot more — not to mention more stops and starts, and plenty more fuel. Think about it. The governor’s plan would add 19,000 new outlets for wine in New York State. Right now there are 2,700. That one delivery of 300 cases of wine would be divided up, on average, into seven stops. Lovely. Just what every town and city across the state needs. There will also be price wars. How will that play out for the store where I work, Northside Wine & Spirits, which is just down the street from two mammoth chainowned supermarkets with colossal buying power, and across the street from a Wal-Mart? (Remember, New York State liquor store owners have never been allowed to hold more than one license — i.e. no chains.) Let’s walk through a scenario. Let’s suppose, for instance, one of these supermarkets initiates a price war involving jug wines, California “fighting varietals,” bigbrand Australian wines and popular South American wines at or near cost. From a consumer’s point of view, fantastic! Convenience and rock bottom prices all in one! For a big box store with its massive capital, absorbing the lack of profit from these items poses little diffi- culty. For Northside Wine & Spirits, however, matching prices proves a dangerous undertaking indeed. These four categories alone represent about 17 percent of Northside’s total wine sales. Thus, instead of taking in, say, $1.25 for every dollar spent on purchases at the wholesale level, Northside would take in a little less than $1.21. Not much at a glance, right? But when one extrapolates to, say, a million-and-a-quarter in sales, $40,000 suddenly vanishes. Never mind what would happen to Northside should the store go toe to toe with the big box stores and match prices on wine from places such as Italy, Spain, Germany, Portugal, France and New York, or categories such as fortified wine and champagne. According to Cornell’s Bradley J. Rickard (assistant professor, Department of Applied Economics and Management), “Wine sales at liquor stores would fall by 17 percent to 32 percent.” One of the governor’s specious “compromises” involves allowing liquor stores to sell food items such as potato chips — beer being conveniently sidestepped. Making up for lost revenue on wines ranging from Kendall-Jackson Chardonnay to Yellow Tail Shiraz means only one thing: selling an incredible amount of chips. Northside would be forced to lay off employees and cut the pay of others. In order to provide anything approaching the level of service Northside has been providing over the years, the store would be forced to reduce its hours from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. to a single shift, something like 10:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. It couldn’t possibly ask its employees to take pay cuts and work 12-hour shifts six days a week. With its full volume of sales compromised the store would also be compelled to scale back its selec- tion, one of its primary draws. With a dwindling array of wine and spirits, assuming the store doesn’t go out of business in short order, what would compel anyone to shop at Northside? For “compromise” items obtainable anywhere such as newspapers and cigars? Yeah, right. And who’s going to monitor these 19,000 new outlets with respect to selling to minors and other compliance issues? The State Liquor Authority, an agency woefully understaffed as it is? (MADD and SADD, are you listening?) How many dollars from taxpayers will the state require to hire enough agents, as if its residents weren’t taxed enough already? Finally, what will happen to the small New York wineries, whose wines form one of the cornerstones of Northside’s selection? A chat with Dick Reno (Chateau Lafayette Reneau), Esther Earle (Earle Estates and Torrey Ridge) and Dave Peterson (Swedish Hill, Goose Watch, Penguin Bay), among others, is revealing to say the least. In a nutshell, the small winery will be pushed off the supermarket shelves, while backdoor deals and other machinations will give other (and mostly much larger) wineries placement priority. To those who have signed petitions, sent letters and made phone calls to stop this wrongheaded piece of legislation, you have my deepest, sincerest gratitude. Indeed, many of you are longtime customers of Northside, know many of the store’s employees by name, appreciate high levels of service and selection and understand the role of the small business in the local and national economies. To those on the fence, who have “heard arguments both ways,” or are outright in favor of wine in supermarkets, gas stations, convenience stores and bodegas, consider Letters Letters Policy Tompkins Weekly welcomes letters to the editor. In order to run letters in a timely fashion, they should be no longer than 300 words. Letters should be e-mailed to [email protected], or mailed to P.O. Box 6404, Ithaca, NY 14851. Please include name, address and the best way to reach you for confirmation. Published by Tompkins Weekly, Inc. Publisher Managing Editor Office Manager Advertising Production Proofreading Calendar Photographer Web Design Cover Design Jim Graney Jay Wrolstad Theresa Sornberger Jim Graney, Adrienne Zornow, Hank Colón Dan Bruffey, Jim Graney, Heidi Lieb-Graney, Adrienne Zornow Danielle Klock Heidi Lieb-Graney & Theresa Sornberger Kathy Morris Dan Bruffey Kolleen Shallcross Contributors: Patricia Brhel, Anne Marie Cummings, Ross Haarstad, Kitty Hall-Thurnheer, Ann Krajewski, Nicholas Nicastro, Nate Robson, Tina Wright Tompkins Weekly publishes weekly on Mondays. Advertising and Editorial Deadline is Wednesday prior to 1 p.m. Member Tompkins County Chamber of Commerce. For advertising information or editorial business, contact our offices at PO Box 6404, Ithaca, NY 14851, 607-327-1226, [email protected] www.tompkinsweekly.com. Article submissions must include SASE. Contents © 2010 Tompkins Weekly, Inc. The opinions expressed in this piece are those of each writer, and do not necessarily represent the opinions of the publisher. No parts of this newspaper may be reprinted without the permission of the publisher. 6 Tompkins Weekly February 8 this: It’s the 23rd of December, 5 p.m., and you suddenly realize you haven’t picked up that case of wine for that upcoming feast. You pull into the parking lot at one of the big box supermarkets — Northside, now closed after having been in business for over 45 years, is no longer a choice — and it’s chaos, people jockeying for valuable parking spaces near the entrance. Finally, you have to settle for a space at the parking lot’s perimeter. It’s a long, cold, time-consuming schlep in, and a long, cold, time-consuming schlep back to the car. Good luck with that. As I consider the governor’s proposal, I think about the day when I find myself and my 26 coworkers unemployed. I envision waiting for a call that might never come from a supermarket manager for whom I had recently completed a job application, hoping that I might land a job buying, stocking and selling an utterly boring selection of wine. With this piece of legislation, I can only view the governor as Robin Hood’s hypothetical doppelgänger, eager to give to the big boxes and take away from the small businesses. The liquor stores across New York State have been suffocated for 77 years by a Gordian set of postProhibition laws, from which repairing the damage done may take yet another 77 years in order to create a level field of play — if indeed that’s what the governor’s handful of artificial “compromises” purports to do. All of which is why Joe Pecoraro, in his exposé referred to at the beginning of this letter, writes, “Those politicians and businessmen that seek to foist this immoral act of piracy on liquor stores should be ashamed. In fact, I think they should be arrested.” Dana Malley is general manager at Northside Wine & Spirits in Ithaca. Digital TV for All I got the message before I got to Ithaca: either buy a converter, or a new digital television. After I arrived in the city I received $250 from the White House and decided on the latter. I was surprised to learn, though, that there were no air-digital channels here, and that the only one that existed was FOX. Since I don’t watch much TV, I became somewhat satisfied with the few satirical shows like “Mad TV,” “The Simpsons” and “Family Guy.” Unfortunately, these soon were gone and I certainly won’t be satisfied with “The 600-Speed Blender Show” or “You’re Not My Kid!” or how about “The Antelope You’ve Been Secretly Sleeping With is Backstage.” I’m left (and I’m sure I’m not alone) with a very expensive DVD monitor. We own the airwaves, we pay for them, but they just don’t reach Ithaca! If you’re poor and/or just don’t watch the tube much, why should you pay a cable company when you can get standard broadcasts free from the air as other cities do? I’ve learned recently that we’re in a valley and those waves don’t get down to us. If FOX can have an electronic translator to get channel 16 (albeit via analog, but good quality) down to us, why can’t we do the same for all those air-digital channels promised by the FCC? If there is the possibility of the nearby transmitting stations, and the city and the county to get together on this to change things, it should be done. Tom MacDonald Ithaca Contact Us: A dve r t i s i n g & B u s i n e s s : 6 0 7 - 3 2 7 - 1 2 2 6 o r j g r a n ey @ t wc ny. r r. c o m Editorial: 6 0 7 - 5 3 9 - 7 1 0 0 o r w r o l s @ t wc ny. r r. c o m Mail: To m p k i n s We e k ly, P O B ox 6 4 0 4 , I t h a c a , N Y 1 4 8 5 1 O n t h e We b a t : w w w. t o m p k i n sw e e k l y. c o m Street Beat The word on the street from around Tompkins county. By Kathy Morris Question: What’s your advice for Obama, one year into his first term in office? “I think he has to do investigation into both the start-up of the Iraq war and the financial meltdown. Pursue independent investigations (like what’s going on in Britain right now).” - Lenore Olmstead, Trumansburg Northeast Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine Kids Are Our Specialty! Accepting New Patients “Keep up the good work.” - Dave Richardson, Lansing Northeast Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine welcomes Dr. Melissa Woo Dr. Woo graduated cum laude from Dartmouth College and received her Medical degree from Dartmouth Medical School. She completed her internship and residency at Tufts: New England Medical Center/Floating Hospital for Children. Dr. Woo was most recently at Massachusetts General Hospital where she performed her Fellowship in Pediatric Endocrinology. During this time, Dr. Woo worked in the lab of Dr. Mary Elizabeth Patti with a focus on discovering mechanistic origins of obesity and Type 2 Diabetes. She is Board Certified in Pediatrics and Pediatric Endocrinology. “Stop the war. (All of them.)” - Alan Cameron, Ithaca Providing Complete Care From Newborn to Age 21 • Lactation Consultants/Counselors on Staff • All Physicians board certified in Pediatrics • Same Day Sick Visits • Se habla espanol • Full spectrum newborn and inpatient care at CMC • Travel and Pediatric Infectious Disease Consults • Separate Adolescent office, including Adolescent GYN Care Call to Schedule an Appointment M-F 7am - 4:30pm • Sat 8am - 11:30am 10 Graham Road West, and at 821 Cliff St., (Rt. 96), Ithaca Northeast Pediatrics 257-2188 Adolescent Medicine 257-5067 www.northeastpeds.com “Just to keep trying to do the right thing. Do what he thinks is right. We voted for him thinking he had a lot of good ideas.” - Erica Evans, Ithaca Submit your question to S t re e t B e at. If we choose your question, you’ll receive a gift certificate to GreenStar Cooperative Market. Simply log onto www.tompkinsweekly.com and click on Street Beat to enter. Tompkins Weekly February 8 7 Franziska Racker Centers www.rackercenters.org Finger Lakes Physical Therapy Dryden Cafe Ithaca A n ti q ue Center Alternatives Federal Credit Union Trumansburg Ch amber o f Commerce Douglas McEver Allstate Insurance Family Medicine A s s o c ia t e s I th a ca R en t al s a nd Renovations T-Burg Liquor CJ DelVecchio, Lic. Assoc. Real Estate Broker of It ha ca , LL P Open 7 days a week 387-7151 G r e e n s t r eet Real Estate D i a na D r u c k e r Ehrhart Propane and Oil 8 www.hubbardheatingandplumbing.com I t h a c a B a k e ry Lifes So Sweet C h o c o l a te s TCAT Visit us at www.tcatbus.com Total Car e Mancini-Fe r rara & So n s , I n c. A&B Awards and Engraving Ponzi's Antiques Mai d in I thaca Itha ca C hil d The Paper for Parents Cayuga Medical Center J ayZ Auto Repair & Tire Center 607-564-9072 Advance Moving & Storage C o b b l er s Cottage Kendal® at Ithaca S hortstop De li J ohnson Apartments Trumansburg O p t i ca l Trumansburg Shur Save Tompkins Weekly February 8 60 years of local service Airtight Foam Spray Home Green Home Gretchen Abbott Des igns 607-749-6506 Students’ Many Talents on View at CU By Ross Haarstad Soirée/Cabaret was devised by students in Cornell professor Bruce Levitt’s solo performance class this past fall, then shaped into an evening of theater in rehearsals this past month under Levitt’s direction. Against frequent semi-autobiographical monologues, the students counterpose comedy sketches, magic tricks, original satirical songs, cabaret standards and contemporary pop. The resulting mélange manages to showcase the performing chops of the 11 students onstage, but sorely needs editing. Frequent flashes of brilliance get buried under the mountains of material, some of it quite mundane. The second act suffers most, especially a lugubrious section focused on death and crises of faith. An uncertainty of tone prevails: producer and emceeAlex Gruhin kicks off the evening with a heavy stand-up swat of irony, exclaiming that the show’s title is “BS” and proceeding to a “disgraceful revelation,” yet shortly we swing into the very non-ironic Stephen Schwartz tune “Spark of Creation” (strong solo by Ariel Reid) while many of the monologues trade on sincerity over rue. In the first half, this juxtaposition more or less works, due to the relaxed ambiance of the ensemble and James Miller’s sprinkling of satirical lyrics delivered with hilar- Photo by Andrew Gillis S o i r é e / C a b a r et , Cornell S c h w a r t z C e n t e r, c o n t i n u i n g t h r o u g h Fe b . 1 4 ( 2 5 4 - A RT S ) . Lauren Bamford and Jeremy Flynn are among the performers in Soirée/Cabaret. iously deadpan folk-guitar stylings. Alejandro Ruiz and Amando Idoko use performance itself as a vehicle for wicked commentary on appearance, race and ethnicity. Idoko offers an audition catalog of “angry Black woman, ghetto black woman, and the black girl in the [insert name of high school].” Ruiz traces his family’s Spanish and Romany roots and the complexities of brown-ness in a black and white world. Indeed, negotiating the marks of L NA O N D I N or s. . AS A CC le f ent me SE U A b ti co F L 1 V vaila g pa e l n W 1 N a ti ts H Now exis tien r a ou w P e N Family Medicine Associates of Ithaca LLP difference animate much of the best work in Act 1: Gruhin’s sardonic rat-a-tat riff on “Fat,” Bridget Saracino’s sizzling “Anoressia,” Jeremy Flynn’s high-flying neurotic recounting of being “Half-Jew,” Ruiz and Saracino’s impassioned duet of sexual orientation blues, “The Invisibles.” Alex Viola offers broadly comic, sharply limned character sketches throughout the evening, often partnered with Flynn. Lauren Bamford performs with sincerity, grace and a bright, lyric soprano. Oddly enough in an evening initially informed by the study of performance art, there is little breaking of the fourth wall, except for the clever magic acts performed by a dexterous Jonathan Tai. Act Two begins with two breathtaking coups de theatre: Tai performs an illusion with a candle and paper rose (against voices of unrequited love) and Jonah Eisenstock relates a reckless moment in a car that brings him within a hairbreadth of being killed. These two moments linger by combining brevity with a strong image and an element of risk. Other such moments include Eisenstock’s being mocked by the published books of his dad; Saracino straddling a very high ladder while recounting a missed romantic encounter, and Idoko’s account of a wrestling tussle that leads to an accidental choking. Most problematic throughout evening is the tendency of Levitt and the ensemble to melodrama, either through over-emoting, overscoring or over-playing. Act Two is mired in it. Other than Miller’s musings and two joyful arrangements for the ensemble by musical director Chris Tolbert (“God Bless the Child” led by Idoko and “On The Radio” led by Saracino), the songs, while beautifully rendered, don’t add anything unique or personal. I came away yearning to see this energetic, whip-smart and stagesavvy group in a pared-down hour that focused on the real facets of their brilliance. All that would take is some judicious editing. E Announcing Sharon Ziegler, MD Appointments for Same Day Sick Visits, & Evening and Saturday Lab Appointments! We take your family’s health to heart! Robert Neil Breiman M.D. Shallish M.D. Elizabeth von Felten M.D. Alan Midura M.D. Wallace Baker M.D. Lloyd Darlow M.D. Karen M. LaFace M.D. Nurse Practitioners: Tina Hilsdorf, RN, NP-C; Debra LaVigne, RN, NP-C; Judy Scherer, RN, FNP o Board Certified American Academy of Family Physicians o Accredited diagnostic laboratory o Minor surgeries performed in office o FMA Physician always on call We Welcome: Excellus Blue Shield, HealthNow, Aetna, Cornell Program for Healthy Living, RMSCO "At Tburg Shur Save, we’ll help you ‘chip’ away at your grocery budget with great savings store-wide on the items you need and use every week. Whether it’s chips or burgers, milk or cleaning supplies, we offer a wide selection of specials; so check our in-store flyer for the items you want and save! So, for friendly, neighborly service and prices so low you’re always shur to save, come see us today!" ~ Catie Estep Mon.-Thurs. 8 am - 9 pm; Fri. 8 am - 5 pm; Sat. 9 am - 2 pm Call 277-4341 or visit www.fma-ithaca.com Two Ithaca locations: Downtown: 209 W. State St., just off The Commons Northeast: 8 Brentwood Dr., just off Warren Rd. Tompkins Weekly February 8 9 By Nicholas Nicastro H H 1 / 2 T he Yo u n g Vi c t o r i a. W r i t t e n b y Ju l i a n Fe l l o w e s . D i re c t e d by Je a n - M a rc Va l l é e. A t C i n e m ap o l i s . Was Queen Victoria ever young? According to the biopic from newcomer Jean-Marc Vallée, indeed she was. But the question remains whether we should care. For the formidable queen of Britain for most of the 19th century is not exactly associated with romping good times. While attending an “Elizabethan” evening promises bawdy fun, and an “Edwardian” one at least the kink of imperial decay, a Victorian evening sounds like an ordeal of cucumber sandwiches and censorious stares — frilly knickers notwithstanding. Vallee’s The Young Victoria won’t do much to change this impression. Featuring Emily Blunt (Sunshine Cleaning, The Devil Wears Prada) in the title role, it offers tasty appetizers of fine costumes and scrumptious décor, but little in the way of a main course. Victoria, as the solitary product of a whole generation of royal loins, comes to the throne as a youth so sheltered she wasn’t even allowed to take a flight of stairs without a spotter. She naturally resents the strong-armed domination of her mother (Miranda Richardson) and her husband, Sir Conroy (Mark Strong, the baddie from Sherlock Holmes). She’s spunky, though (could it be otherwise?), and exacts her revenge when she gets the crown. Alas, she is also lonely in her splendor, and only delivered from her solitude by the arrival of Prince Albert (Rupert Friend). Like any couple where she’s got the real power, negotiating the politics of a marriage can be tricky. But it isn’t necessarily engrossing. It’s hard to fault Emily Blunt for the letdown. Possessed of what is usually called an “unconventional” beauty, Blunt gives no censorious stares. Instead, she often unfurls a smile adorable enough to charm us into what is, in the end, something of a non-story. Rupert Friend, on the other hand, is flirting with becoming typecast as a pretty boytoy — he played much the same role as Michelle Pfeiffer’s playmate/ gold-digger in Cheri. Richardson and Paul Bettany (Legion, Master and Commander) hang around court, too, but languish in forget- IC Hosts Benefit Concert for Haiti Performers from the Ithaca College School of Music will join local musicians on Monday, Feb. 8, in a concert to benefit the victims of the recent earthquake in Haiti. The event will begin at 8:15 p.m. in Ford Hall in the James J. Whalen Center for Music. Though the concert is free and open to the public, donations are encouraged. All proceeds will go to Doctors Without Borders. The concert will feature performances by School of Music ensembles, faculty musicians, the student ensemble Ithacappella and local band Ayurveda. IC President Tom Rochon will give the opening remarks. 10 Tompkins Weekly February 8 Photo provided A Peek Behind Victoria’s Secret Rupert Friend has Emily Blunt's back in The Young Victoria. table roles. Like so many biopics about royalty, this one unfolds largely on the domestic level. But when speaking of an era as heavy with incident as Victoria’s reign, concentrating so narrowly on the travails of a lovely but privileged young woman seems, well, narrow. This was a time when Britain was consolidating herself as the world’s first industrial superpower and ruler of fully one quarter of the world’s population. India was being divided and conquered, and the tyranny of distance over information was broken at last with the advent of the telegraph. Compared to such momentous events, the political fallout of milady’s choice of handmaids seems like pretty small beer. The Young Victoria seems topical in one sense, though: as a powerful but needful woman, she might as well be the patron saint of the current generation of American wives who anxiously out-earn their husbands. At Buckingham Palace, the problem was solved by Albert’s untimely death at the age of 42, an event which represented the emotional crux of the real Victoria’s life and, unaccountably, is not dramatized here. Beware, guys, there’s not much “Victorian” about American culture now, but its ongoing feminization may soon make Prince Alberts of us all. Movie Ratings H H H H H HHHH HHH HH H Classic Excellent Good Fair Poor Passenger Numbers Up at Ithaca Airport By Nate Robson Despite a rough economy keeping people away from airports, the addition of a third airline landed the Ithaca Tompkins Regional Airport its third-highest passenger total ever. Airport manager Bob Nicholas says increased competition created by adding Continental Airlines in October 2008 drove down ticket prices at Northwest Airlines and US Airways in 2009, attracting passengers who were previously flying out of Syracuse. “Continental came in with aggressive airfares and the other carriers matched them,” Nicholas says. “That’s the goal of competition, if you get competitive airfare, you will get more passengers.” In December, 9,743 passengers used the Ithaca Tompkins Regional Airport, up 17 percent compared to December 2008. The yearly passenger total for 2009 was 109,259, ranking only behind 1990 Trash Continued from page 1 Timing is one of the main issues. Lambrou said that the city notified him on Dec. 5 of the first $300 fine for which Kennedy and her roommates were cited. “And then I received notice of that fine a week later,” said Lambrou, who then wrote to Kennedy and her roommates on Dec. 24, alerting them of several fine notifications that he had received. Said Kennedy, “It was on January 7th that my roommate received an e-mail from Lambrou citing five garbage violations in the amount of $300 each (the first issued Nov. 13, followed by subsequent fines on Nov. 23 and Dec. 3, 11 and 29). But because the e-mail went to a spam folder it wasn’t until I spoke to my landlord on January 19, because I and 1988, which had 114,154 and 111,244 passengers, respectively. Michael Stamm, president of Tompkins County Area Development, says many local passengers saved more than money by using an airport closer to home. “The airport is re-capturing people who were flying out of Syracuse,” Stamm says. “This will help them maximize their time so they are not wasting their time driving to Syracuse and back. Some people will choose to go to Syracuse if it offers a flight that leaves at a better time, but a lot of people are finding it’s more convenient to fly out of here.” On a national level, the Ithaca Tompkins Regional Airport’s growth comes as many airports deal with shrinking passenger numbers, Nicholas says. At the end of 2009, Syracuse Hancock International Airport’s passenger total was down 8.3 percent from the previous year, while Binghamton Regional Airport’s total decreased by 6.7 percent. The economy was cited as the main factor for the lower numbers, with leisure travelers cutting back the most on air travel, Nicholas says. While other airports also noticed a corresponding decline in plane occupancy, Nicholas notes that planes flying out of the Ithaca Tompkins Regional Airport are carrying more passengers than they were in 2008. Load factors for planes in 2009 were at almost 72 percent, compared to less than 62 percent in 2008. Even though his airport saw growth in the face of an economic recession, Nicholas says it is unlikely the Ithaca Tompkins Regional Airport would attempt to add a fourth airline to draw in more travelers. “Small airports need to be careful about how much capacity they offer,” Nicholas says. “If we add a fourth airline, instead of increasing passenger totals we could take the existing passengers and spread them out over more flights, decreasing flight loads, causing all of the airlines to lose money. Then one or two of the airlines could decide it’s better to pull out.” Instead, the airport may build an addition onto the back of the main terminal to house the Transporta-tion Security Administration’s offices, freeing up more space for passengers at the ticket counters where those offices are currently located, Nicholas says. Nicholas won’t predict what 2010 will bring for local passenger numbers, but he says the airport will continue to provide convenient and affordable air service. “The airport is here to serve people, not to make a profit,” he says. “We’re not about profit or loss, we’re about providing a service to the local community. We are pleased the competition here is such that we can offer affordable airfares.” happened to call him about some other issue, that I became aware of the six fines my house had accrued, the sixth being issued January 5.” Kennedy said she met with Lambrou on Jan. 19 to discuss her fines. “He told me and my roommates to go and fight this in city court,” she said. “To my knowledge, no one has paid these fines yet. And at this point my housemates and I are still unsure of how to proceed.” Lambrou added, “It’s unfortunate that Kristen and her housemates do not have the right to plead their case for the tickets that were brought upon them. Generally I will pay the fines and then we will send the invoice to the students as per the lease. I hope this situation with Kristen and her housemates is the catalyst for positive change to city code.” City Attorney Dan Hoffman is aware of the situation. He suggested that if landlords are going to include such clauses in their leases, the city could require timely notice to the tenants rather than saving the tickets and presenting them at a later point after they’ve accumulated. Svante Myrick, a Common Council member representing the fourth ward in Collegetown, commented, “The issue here is that Kennedy and her housemates got their third ticket before they found out that they were breaking the law. If the incentive is not there to make sure the tenants know what’s happening, then what Dan Hoffman mentioned makes sense,” he said. Phyllis Radke, Building Commissioner for the City of Ithaca, suggests that people should be wary of what they say they’re willing to do when they sign a lease. But, she said, “The way things are certainly does put the onus back on the tenant and this is certainly not how we envisioned this; we ticket the property owner, not the tenant.” But is the property owner responsible for what tenants do or do not do when it comes to putting out the garbage and making sure lids are on the containers? Myrick believes that property owners are responsible for letting tenants know what the rules are. “That was the logic behind the legislation,” he said. “We don’t expect any renter is going to pick up the city code, but we do expect landlords to know the rules and inform their tenants about them.” Myrick noted that, in general, property maintenance is the responsibility of the landlord, but he feels that it doesn’t make sense for landlords to be continually fined for what their tenants are doing or not doing. “It’s not a perfect system, but it’s the system we’ve got at this time.” Tompkins Weekly February 8 11 Tompkins County Community Calendar... 8 Monday Advanced Cancer Group, 10:30-11:30am, Cancer Resource Center,612 West State St, Every Monday except holidays. Drop in support for people who have been diagnosed with cancer. No registration necessary. Info., 277-0960. Baby Storytime, 10:30-11am, Tompkins Co. Public Library, Caregivers and newborns up to 15 months old are invited to join us each Monday in the Thaler/Howell Programming Room for stories, songs, and togetherness. For more info, 272-4557 ext. 275. Cayuga Bird Club Meeting, 7:30 pm, Auditorium, Lab of Ornithology, Sapsucker Woods Rd., for "Season on the Trail." John Morris will present "Natural connections on the Finger Lakes Trail, from Precocious Peepers and Mimicked Monarchs to Squiffy Squirrel's and Chattering Chickadees." Meetings are free and open to the public and anyone interested in birds is invited to attend. For information, call 2560460 or email [email protected]. Children’s Tap, 4pm, Southside Community Center, 305 S. Plain St Ithaca, 273-4190 x225, ages 5-8, Jan 25thMay 24th, Info., [email protected]. Cornell Cinema, WHS, 7pm, The Last Tango in Paris; 9:30pm, Capitalism: A Love Story; $5 seniors, $4 students and kids 12 & under, $4 matinees (before 6pm), SCPA shows: $4. Info., http://cinema.cornell.edu. Cortland Jazzercise, 4:45 and 6 pm, 241 McLean Road, next to Grand Rental, Info., jazzercise.com or call 607-288-4040 ([email protected]). Cortland Youth Center, Open from 12-9pm. Info: www.cortland.org/youth or call 753-0872. Elective Joint Recital: Timothy Orton, tuba & Joshua Zimmer, trombone, 9pm, Nabenhauer Recital Room, Ithaca College, Information, 274-3717 or email [email protected]. Emergency Food Pantry, 1-3:30pm, Tompkins Community Action, 701 Spencer Rd., Ithaca. Provides individuals and families with 2-3 days worth of nutritious food and personal care items. Info. 272-8816. GIAC Teen Program 4-7pm, 318 N. Albany St., Ithaca, Game Room, Video Games, Open Gym & Field Trips Hatha Yoga w/Dr. Kasia, 6-7:20pm, World Seishi Karate, 989 Dryden Rd., Varna, Info.,277-1047 or [email protected]. Intro to ProTools Audio Recording Software, 4:306pm, Southside Community Center, 305 S. Plain St Ithaca, 273-4190 x225, Jan 25th-May 24th, Info., [email protected]. Jazz Dance Classes with Nancy Gaspar, 7:15pm, Finger Lakes Fitness Center, 171 E. State St., Center Ithaca, Drop-ins welcome. Info., 256-3532. Jazzercise, 5:45 & 6:45pm, 119 W Court St., Ithaca. Jazzercise combines dance, resistance training, pilates, yoga, kickboxing and more to create programs for people of every age and fitness level. More info. 288-4040 or www.jazzercise.com. Knowledge is Power, 6pm, group for those who have been in abusive relationships, For info., 277-3203. Ahimsa Yoga Kundalini Yoga Classes, 7:30-9pm, Center, Dewitt Mall, Info., 760-5386. Lifelong Schedule, 8:30–9:30AM, Enhance Fitness® Lifelong, 119 W. Court Street, Ithaca; 9–10AM, Enhance Fitness®, Ellis Hollow Road Apartments Tenants only; 9–10AM, Enhance Fitness® - Juniper Manor I, 24 Elm St., Trumansburg; 10–11AM, T’ai Chi Class, Titus Towers Apartments Tenants only; 10–12PM, Clay Class; 10–12PM, StateWide’s 1st TC General Interest & Chapter Meeting; 10–12PM, Mystery Book Club, 10:15–11:15AM, Enhance Fitness®-Enfield Community Building, 168 Enfield Main Rd.; 12:30–1:30PM, Strength Training; 1–2:30PM, Polish II; 1–3PM, Spacecraft Tour of the Solar System; 2–3PM, Enhance Fitness®, McGraw House Annex, 211 S. Geneva St.; 3–5PM, Documentary Series, 7–9PM, International Folk Dancing All Ages Welcome, Info., www.tclifelong.org. Loaves & Fishes Community Kitchen, Noon-1pm, St. John's Church, 210 N Cayuga St., Meals and hospitality. Open to all, no limitations or requirements. Info., www.loaves.org. Overeaters Anonymous, 7:30-8:30pm, Henry St. John Building, 301 S. Geneva St., #103, corner W. Clinton St., Speakers meeting, Meetings are free, confidential, no weigh-ins or diets. Info., 387-8253. Personal Defense, 7:30-8:30pm, World Seishi Karate, 989 Dryden Rd., Info., [email protected] or 277-1047. Post Traumatic Stress Disorder Meeting, 6PM (holidays excluded), The First Baptist Church, Dewitt Park, PTSD Ithaca is an independent, Post Traumatic Stress Disorder support, social, educational and self-help group to assist those individuals who have been diagnosed with or think they may have PTSD. Pre-School Story Hour and Craft, 10am, The SPCA Annex at The Shops at Ithaca Mall. Safety in the Early Years, Cayuga Medical Center. Accident and injury prevention, first aid for choking and infant CPR. Fee. Info., 274-4408 or www.cayugamed.org. Shakuhachi Flute w/Senpai Kim, 6:30-7:30pm, World Seishi Karate, 989 Dryden Rd. (in Varna), Info., [email protected] or 277-1047. The Draft Downtown Ithaca 2020 Strategic Plan, 7pm, Tompkins County Library, Borg Warner Room, A Presentation to the Community and request for input. Handouts available at the presentation. Draft strategy available at www.downtownithaca.com. The Simon & Garfunkel Songbook, 8pm, Auburn Public Theater, 108 Genesee at Exchange St., Downtown Auburn, performed by Aztec Two-Step, With opener Dusty Pas'cal, Info., www.auburnpublictheater.org, (315) 253-6669. The Grady Girls, 7:30pm, The Shop, 312 Seneca St., Ithaca, Irish Traditional Music. Ulysses Historical Society Museum, 9-11am, 39 South St., Trumansburg, Genealogical research. Info., 387-6666. Winter Sprouts, 10-11am, Mama Goose, 430 W. State St., Ithaca, Join the Ithaca Children’s Garden at Mama Goose for stories and hands-on gardening activities every Monday in January and February. For children ages 2-5 and their caregivers. Free, For directions to Mama Goose, visit their website: www.mamagooseithaca.com. Youth Bingo, 5:30-7:30pm, Southside Community Center, 305 S. Plain St Ithaca, 273-4190 x225, Jan 25th-May 24th, Info., [email protected]. Zen Meditation Practice, Every Monday 5:30-6:30pm, Anabel Taylor Hall, Cornell, founders Room. Sponsored by the Ithaca Zen Center. Prior sitting experience or attendance of an orientation session required to participate.For information or to schedule an orientation, contact Tony @ 277-1158 or Marissa @ 272-1419. 9 Tuesday 29th Annual Black Maria Film and Video Festival with festival director John Columbus, 7:15, SCPA, Cornell, Named for Thomas Edison's 1893 experimental motion picture studio, this touring festival features cutting edge films from prominent avant-garde, documentary and animation film and videomakers world-wide. Line-up at cinema.cornell.edu. More at More at blackmariafilmfestival.org. Video Projection. Al-Anon, 12noon, 518 W. Seneca St., Ithaca, Meeting open to anyone affected by another person’s drinking. Info., 387-5701. Bereaved Parents Group, 5:30-7pm, Hospicare and Pallitative Care Services, 2nd Tuesday of the month. A 12 Tompkins Weekly February 8 peer-run support group for bereaved parents and grandparents. Info., 255-9470. Biologist and Author Sandra Steingraber at IC, 7:30pm, Park Hall Auditorium, Ithaca College, For more information, contact PCIM director Jeff Cohen at [email protected] or (607) 274-1330. Church Basement Ladies, 2pm & 7:30pm, State Theatre, State St., ithaca, Tickets: $32.50 / $28.50 / $23.50, Funny and down to earth, audiences will recognize these ladies as they witness the church year unfold from below the sanctuary. Info., www.stateofithaca.com. Cornell Cinema, WHS, 7:15pm, The Cove; 9:15, The Last Tango in Paris; $5 seniors, SCPA, 7:15pm, The 29th Annual Black Maria Film and Video Festival with festival director John Columbus; $4 students and kids 12 & under, $4 matinees (before 6pm), SCPA shows: $4. Info., http://cinema.cornell.edu. Cortland Jazzercise, 4:45 & 6pm, 241 McLean Road, next to Grand Rental, Info., jazzercise.com or call 607288-4040 ([email protected]). Cortland Youth Center, 12noon-9pm, www.cortland.org/youth, 753-3021. Enfield Food Pantry, 1-2:30pm, Community Center in Enfield, 2nd Tuesday of the month, Please bring your own boxes or bags, Info., 277-6336 with any questions. “Evolution and Biodiversity on Land”, 5pm, CU, G10 Biotech. Panel Discussion to Celebrate Darwin Days. "Families & Friends" Cancer Support Group, 5:30pm, Cancer Resource Center, 612 W. State St., Ithaca, 2nd Tuesdays, 277-0960. First Time Homebuyers Workshop, 6:30-8:30 PM, Old Jail Conference Room is located at 125 E. Court Street, Ithaca, These workshops fill up very quickly. If you would like to attend on a certain date, please call 273-2187 several weeks in advance to sign up. Info., www.betterhousingtc.org Friends of the Library Book Sale, Accepting Donations for Spring Sale. 9am-Noon, 509 Esty Street, Ithaca. More info. www.booksale.org or 272-2223. GIAC Teen Program, 7-9pm, 318 N. Albany St., Ithaca, Game Room, Video Games, Open Gym & Field Trips 47pm. 272-3622. Basketball Tuesdays at BJM. Guest Concert: Sao Paulo University Percussion Ensemble, 8:15pm, Ford Hall, Ithaca College, Info., [email protected] or 274-3717. Hatha Yoga w/Dr. Kasia, 12-1:20pm, 989 Dryden Rd. (in Varna), World Seishi Karate, Info., 277-1047, [email protected]. ICSD Meeting, 7pm, Meetings of the Ithaca City School District are on the second and fourth Tuesdays of each month. They will be rebroadcast Thursdays and Saturdays of meeting weeks at 7am, 1pm, and 7pm. Info 274-2102. Immaculate Conception Church Food Pantry. Free, fresh produce, breads, desserts, dairy and deli. Seneca near Geneva St., Ithaca 1-1:45pm. For low to moderate incomes, limit 1 pantry per week. www.friendshipdonations.org. Intro to Capoeira, 5:30-6:30pm, Southside Community Center, 305 S. Plain St Ithaca, 273-4190 x225, ages 610, Jan 25th-May 24th, Info., [email protected]. Ithaca Gay Mens Chorus, 7-9pm, First Baptist Church, Ithaca, every Tuesday. Ithaca Toastmasters Club, 7-8pm, meets every Tuesday, 6th floor of Rhodes Hall, Conference Room #655, Cornell University, Ithaca. Jazzercise, 5:45pm, 119 W Court St., Ithaca. Jazzercise combines dance, resistance training, pilates, yoga, kickboxing and more to create programs for people of every age and fitness level. More info. 288-4040. Knowledge is Power, 6pm, group for those who have been in abusive relationships, For info., 277-3203. Lifelong Schedule, 9–12PM, Morning Watercolor Studio; 10–12PM, Open Computer Lab/Discussion; 1–4PM, Confidential HIV Testing and Counseling by appt, Call 274-6683; 1–4PM, Afternoon Art Studio All art styles welcome; 2–4PM, Open Computer Lab/Discussion; 3–4:30PM, Skeptics Guide to Community; 5–6PM, Beginning Spanish II; 6–7:30PM, MS Support Group; Info., tclifelong.org. Loaves & Fishes Community Kitchen, 6-7pm, St. John's Church, 210 N Cayuga St., Meals and hospitality. Open to all, no limitations, www.loaves.org. Meditation at Rasa Spa. 7:30-8:30pm. Tranquility Room, Shamatha, or “calm abiding”, meditation. $5 donation. Info., 273-1740, visit www.rasaspa.com. Overeaters Anonymous, 12:15-1:15pm, Henry St. John Building, 301 S. Geneva St., #103, corner W. Clinton St., 12 Steps & 12 Traditions meeting. Meetings are free, confidential, no weigh-ins or diets. Info., 387-8253. Parkinson's Exercise and Support Group, January 12-March 30, 10:30-11:25AM, Kendal at Ithaca auditorium, $45 for 12 classes or $4/class. Supportive caregivers are welcome to participate at no cost. New participants should call Ms. Bosanko at 229-5960 for registration information. Playgroup at Southside Community Center, 2:30–4pm, Southside Community Center, 305 S. Plain Street, Ithaca. Free playgroup for young children and their parents, for ages 1-6, We will meet once a week on Tuesdays from February 9 – April 6, There will be fun, age-appropriate toys. We would like participating parents to volunteer to lead the group one week. Call 273-4190 or 273-8364 ext. 148 for more info. Sao Paulo University Percussion Ensemble, 8:15pm, Ford Hall, Ithaca College, Gordon Stout and Conrad Alexander, directors, Info., 274-3717, [email protected]. Save Energy, Save Dollars, 6:30-8:30 pm, Cooperative Extension Education Center, 615 Willow Avenue, Ithaca, This FREE workshop covers the most effective low-cost and no-cost ways to reduce your home energy usage and describes programs that can help you pay for energy-efficiency improvements to your home. Each participating household receives a FREE Energy Saver kit worth $15. Pre-registration is required. Call 272-2292 to reserve a seat and an energy kit, or email Carole Fisher at [email protected]. Science Cabaret, 7pm, WildFire Lounge, 106 S. Cayuga St., Ithaca, In commemoration of the birthday and ideas of Dr. Charles Darwin, born February 12, 1809. Free & Open to the Public Sciencenter Storytime: Pop: A Book about Bubbles, 10:30-11:30am, Sciencenter, 601 First St., Ithaca, $5-$7, Toddlers and preschoolers are invited to hear the story. Info., www.sciencenter.org. Sexual Compulsives Anonymous, 5:30pm, This is an anonymous 12-Step Group of men and women whose purpose is to recover from sexual compulsion. Info., [email protected] or www.sca-recovery.org. Stress Management Group, 11am, Starlight Center, 301 S. Geneva St., Ithaca, Suite 110, 277-7337. Toddler Storytime, 10:30-11am, Tompkins County Library, Thaler/Howell Programming Room, Toddlers (16 months to 2 years) and their care givers are invited to join us for rhythmic stories and rollicking fun, Info., 272-4557 ext. 275. Toddler Time Storytime, 10am, Groton Public Library, Enjoy stories with Mrs. Radford, Info., 898-5055. Tuesday Lunch Club, 12noon, Royal Court Restaurant, 529 S. Meadow St., An informal lunch get-together on the 2nd Tuesday of the month for bereaved adults. Participants pay for their own food and beverage. Info email [email protected] or 272-0212. Women's Barbershop Chorus, 6:45-9:15PM, practices Tuesday evenings at Boynton Middle School, New voices welcome. Work Hard, Play Hard! CNY Board Meeting, A Business to Business Networking Event. Greek Peak Mountain Resort is proud to offer the latest in Networking opportunities for the CNY and Southern Tier Areas. Meet the people and make the connections that will give you and your company the upper hand in today's economy. Suits and ties not required. For info: www.greekpeakmtnresort.com Yoga for Women in Midlife, 6-7:15pm, 132 Northview Road, Ithaca, Explore the possibilities for renewed strength and aliveness, calm and alert mind, with acceptance and compassionate awareness. Information 319-4138 or [email protected]. 10 Wednesday 2010 Sweetheart Dance, 7pm, (snow date is February 11th), The Charles O. Dickerson High School Gym, Trumansburg, sponsored by the Trumansburg Music Boosters, Candlelight rose petals, decadent desserts, “heartwarming” beverages, and live musical selections performed by the High School Jazz Band and Vocal Jazz Choir will add to the romantic atmosphere of this popular community event. Tickets for the dance will be available at the door for $5, which includes a drink and desserts. Couples, singles, and families are all welcome but children should be accompanied by an adult. For further information, contact Liz Brown at [email protected] or Hope Lewis at 387-7551. Acupuncture: History and Methods, 7PM, Lansing Community Library, 29 Auburn Road, Lansing, Dr. Vladimir Bobkoff, Licensed Acupuncturist (L.Ac.), will talk about the history of Japanese acupuncture, its development in the United States, and demonstrate how Japanese acupuncture is performed. Join us for this informational presentation. Free and open to the public. Anorexia Nervosa & Associated Disorders, 7:308:30pm, Cooperative Extension, 614 W. State St., for those in need of help & recovery. Info., 272-2292. Babies, Books, and Bounce Time, 11:30-12noon, Tompkins County Library, Thaler/Howell Room. Basketball League, 5-7pm, Southside Community Center, 305 S. Plain St Ithaca, 273-4190 x225, Ages 11-13, Info., [email protected] Cancer Education and Support Group, 4:306:30pm, Bonnie Howell Education Center, Cayuga Medical Center, 2nd Wednesdays. An education and support program for men and women with any type of cancer. Info., 277-0960. Candor Food Pantry, 2:30-4:30 pm, Rt 96, across from Post Office, Free, fresh produce, breads, desserts, dairy and deli. For low to moderate incomes, limit 1 pantry per week. Info., www.friendshipdonations.org. Cornell Cinema, WHS, 7pm, The Garden; 9pm, A Serious Man; $5 seniors, $4 students and kids 12 & under, $4 matinees (before 6pm), SCPA shows: $4. Info., http://cinema.cornell.edu. Cortland Jazzercise, 4:45 and 6 pm, 241 McLean Road, next to Grand Rental, Info., jazzercise.com or call 607-288-4040 ([email protected]). Cortland Lime Hollow Bird Club, 7pm, Lime Hollow’s Visitors Center, 338 McLean Road, Cortland. Meets the 2nd Wednesday of the month. All are welcome. Info www.limehollow.org. Cortland Youth Center, Open from 12-9pm. Info., www.cortland.org/youth, 753-3021. Culsar and the Latin American Studies Program are presenting the film, Abused: The Postville Raid, 7PM, Uris Auditorium, Cornell, Free and open to the public. Elective Joint Recital: Andrew Welkie and William Llarch, French horn, 8:15pm, Nabenhauer Recital Room, Ithaca College, Info., 274-3717 or email [email protected]. “Evolution and Biodiversity in the Sea”, 5pm, CU,G10 Biotech, Panel Discussion to celebrate Darwin Days. Family Storytime, 11:30-12noon, Tompkins County Public Library, Thayler/Howell Room, Free for everyone. Gourds Galore, 6-9pm, Cornell Plantations, 1 Plantations Rd., Ithaca, 2nd part of this class will be on Feb.10. Info., www.cornellplantations.org/event. Harlem Globetrotters, 7pm, Newman Arena, Bartles Hall, Cornell. Jazz Dance Classes with Nancy Gaspar, 5:45pm, Finger Lakes Fitness Center,171 E. State St., Center Ithaca, lower level, Non-members & drop-ins welcome, Info., 256-3532. Jazzercise Dance Fitness: 4:45pm and 5:45pm and 6:45pm, 3100 N. Triphammer Rd., Lansing, Aerobic dance, strength and stretching set to a variety of music. Ages 16+ (607)288-4040, www.jazzercise.com. Jazzercise, 5:45pm, 119 W Court St., Ithaca, Jazzercise combines dance, resistance training, pilates, yoga, kickboxing and more to create programs for people of every age and fitness level. Info., 288-4040. Lansing Writers' Group, 7PM, Lansing Community Library, 29 Auburn Road, Lansing, Meetings are open to adults and focused, mature minors who strive to improve their writing skills and learn from each other. All genres, skill levels, and writing types are welcome. Group will meet weekly on Wednesday nights. Additional information available at www.groups.yahoo.com/group/lansingwriters group. Free and open to the public. Lifelong Schedule, 8:30–9:30AM, Enhance Fitness®, Lifelong, 119 W. Court Street, Ithaca; 9–10AM, Enhance Fitness®, Ellis Hollow Road Apartments , Tenants Only; 9–10AM, Enhance Fitness®, Juniper Manor I, 24 Elm St., Trumansburg; 9–12PM, HIICAP Health Insurance Counseling, by appointment Call 273-1511; 10–12noon, Current Events/World Affairs: A General Discussion; 10–12noon, Tips on Searching the Internet; 10:15–11:15AM, Enhance Fitness®, Enfield Community Building, 168 Enfield Main Rd., 10:30–11:30AM, Chair Yoga, St. Catherine of Siena Parish Hall, St. Catherine Circle; 1PM, Off-Site--Weaver View Farms, Penn Yan; 1–2:30PM, dvanced German; 1–3:30PM, Crafting CircleNeedlework and Quilting; 2–3PM, Enhance Fitness®, McGraw House Annex, 211 S. Geneva St., Ithaca; 2:30–4PM, New Date--Cell Phone 101; 7–8PM, T’ai Chi for Balance; Info., www.tclifelong.org. Little Explorers Storytime 11am. Borders Books at The Shops at Ithaca Mall. 257-0444. Loaves & Fishes Community Kitchen, Noon to 1pm, St. John's Church, 210 N Cayuga St., Meals and hospitality. Open to all, no limitations or requirements. www.loaves.org. Midday Music for Organ: Annette Richards, University organist, 12:30PM, Sage Chapel, Cornell, "Late 18thCentury Decadence" features music of C. P. E. Bach, W. F. Bach, Krebs, Mozart, and Beethoven, performed on the Aeolian-Skinner organ. Mike Shaw, 7pm, T-burg pourhouse, 19 W. main Street, Trumansburg, Info., WWW.TBURGPOURHOUSE.COM. Objects in the Mirror, 7:30pm, Kitchen Theatre Company, Clinton House, 116 N. Cayuga St., Cost: $15$17, for ages 16 and over, tickets: 800-284-8422, Info., 272-0403 or www.kitchentheatre.org. Qigong for Health, 6pm, Ithaca Karate Harmony with Nature School, 120 E. King Rd., ancient energy practices, 273-8980. Seidaiko “Taiko” Japanese Drum Classes, 78:30pm, World Seishi Karate, 989 Dryden Rd., For beginning students. Info [email protected] or 277-1047. Soiree/Cabaret!, 7:30pm, Schwartz Center for the Performing Arts, 430 College Ave., Ithaca, Soiree/Cabaret! will celebrate great songs and feature memorable comedy sketches in a theatrical format that will delight and surprise. Info., www.arts.cornell.edu or 607-254-ARTS for ticket information. The Draft Downtown Ithaca 2020 Strategic Plan, 8:30am, Tompkins County Library, Borg Warner Room, A Presentation to the Community and request for input. Handouts available at the presentation. Draft strategy available at www.downtownithaca.com. The Spinal Wellness Center Information Night, 5:30pm, Spinal Wellness Center, 114 1/2 W. Buffalo Street, Ithaca, Info., 277-2570. Winter Storytime at Mama Goose, 10am, Mama Goose, 430 W. State St., Ithaca, Families are welcome to bring their own snacks to this free event. The stories will be geared toward toddlers and preschoolers, but all ages are welcome. Call (607) 269-0600 or visit mamagooseithaca.com for more details. Zen Meditation Practice, Every Wednesday 5:306:30pm, Anabel Taylor Hall, Cornell, founders Room. Sponsored by the Ithaca Zen Center. Prior sitting experience or attendance of an orientation session required to participate.For information or to schedule an orientation, contact Tony @ 277-1158 or Marissa @ 272-1419. 11 Thursday AL-ANON Hope for Today, Meeting open to anyone affected by another person’s drinking. 7:30pm 8444210. 518 West Seneca St., Ithaca, main floor. Art for Lunch: James Siena, 12noon-1pm, Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, Cornell University Central & University Aves., Ithaca, free, Info., 255-6464 or www.museum.cornell.edu. Book Discussion Group, 11am, Southworth Library, Main St., Dryden, 2nd Thursdays, All are welcome to join us for stimulating conversation and coffee. Info., 8444782, www.southworthlibrary.org. "Business Tax Tune-Up" seminar, 6-8:30pm, Alternatives Federal Credit Union, Ithaca, 2nd floor conference room, Cost: $20, Pre-Registration REQUIRED: contact Alison: [email protected]. Cancer Resource Center Yoga Class, 9:30am-11am, Island Health and Fitness, The classes are free to anyone with a cancer diagnosis, but registration is required. To do so, call the Cancer Resource Center at 277-0960 or contact [email protected]. Cornell Cinema, WHS, 7pm, The Beaches of Agnes; 9:20pm, Coco Before Chanel; $5 seniors, $4 students and kids 12 & under, $4 matinees (before 6pm), SCPA shows: $4. Info., http://cinema.cornell.edu. Cortland Jazzercise, 241 McLean Road, next to Grand Rental, 4:45 and 6 pm. Info., jazzercise.com or call 607-288-4040 ([email protected]). Cortland Youth Center, Open from 12-9pm, Info., www.cortland.org/youth, 753-3021. Depression Support Group, 5:30-7pm, Finger Lakes Independence Center, 215 Fifth Street, Ithaca. Every Thurs. The group is free, confidential and organized by people who have personal experience with depression. Info., 272-2433. Dryden Youth Opportunity Fund, 7pm, Dryden Community Cafe, Main St., Dryden. Fitness Training for Kids, 6:30-8pm, Southside Community Center, 305 S. Plain St Ithaca, 273-4190 x225, Ages, 11-18, Info., [email protected]. GIAC Teen Program, 4-7pm, 318 N. Albany St., Ithaca, Game Room, Video Games, Open Gym & Field Trips, Info., 272-3622. Greg Brown, 3rd Floor ballrooom, CSMA, 330 East State Street, Ithaca, Tickets $27.50 in advance for this seated event and tickets are on sale now. This intimate engagement should sell quickly so reserve your space early and guarantee the best seats. Buy tickets at dansmallspresents.com. Halsey Valley Pantry, 4–4:45pm, GAR building, Hamilton Rd, Halsey Valley, Free, fresh produce, breads, desserts, dairy and deli. For low to moderate incomes, limit 1 pantry per week. www.friendshipdonations.org. Hatha Yoga w/Dr. Kasia, 12-1:20pm, World Seishi Karate, 989 Dryden Rd. (in Varna), Info., [email protected] or 277-1047. Hiphop Classes, 5-6:30pm, Southside Community Center, 305 S. Plain St Ithaca, 273-4190 x225, ages 12-16, Jan 25th-May 24th, Info., [email protected]. Informational Meeting about Foster Care and Adoption, 12Noon-1pm, Human Services Building, 320 W. State St., Rm. 142, Ithaca, Tompkins County Department of Social Services has a need for foster families for all ages of children but especially for families in the Ithaca City School District and for families who will foster teenagers. For more information, please call (607) 274-5266. Lecture, 5pm, CU Lewis Auditorium, Goldwin Smith Hall, "Saving all the Pieces: Evolutionary Benchmarks for Conservation" with Dr. Harry Greene, Cornell University, Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology. Lifelong Schedule, 9–10:30AM, Cancelled--Knit a Saddle Shoulder Sweater or Vest; 9–11:30AM, Social Security, A Better Understanding, FREE; 9:30–11:30PM, NEW TIME: Computers l for Absolute Beginners; 10–11:30AM, Poetry Writing; 12–6PM, Free Tax Preparation for Seniors Citizens, People with Limited Incomes, and Individuals with Disabilities, by appointment only. Call 273-1511 to schedule an appointment; 12:30–1:30PM, Strength Training Class; 1–4PM, Black History Month Movie: St. Louis Blues starring Nat King Cole and Eartha Kitt, Northside-Southside Group, FREE; 2–3PM, Senior Theater Troupe; 6–7:30PM, Couples Pattern Dance Lessons; 6:30–8:30PM, Exploring Open Office Suite; 7:30–9PM, Line Dancing Lessons; Info., www.tclifelong.org. Loaves & Fishes Community Kitchen, St. John's Church, 210 N Cayuga Street. 6pm to 7pm. Meals and hospitality. Open to all, no limitations or requirements. Lynn Wiles, 7pm, T-burg pourhouse, 19 W. main Street, Trumansburg, Info., WWW.TBURGPOURHOUSE.COM. Modern Dance, 5:30-7:30pm, CSMA, 330 E. Martin Luther King Jr./State St., Nathanielsz Dance Studio, Drop-ins welcome. Objects in the Mirror, 7:30pm, Kitchen Theatre Company, Clinton House, 116 N. Cayuga St., Cost: $15$17, for ages 16 and over, tickets: 800-284-8422, Info., 272-0403 or www.kitchentheatre.org. Overeaters Anonymous, 6:15-7pm, Henry St. John Building, 301 S. Geneva St., #103, corner W. Clinton St., Just for Today/open sharing meeting. Overeaters Anonymous is a worldwide 12 Step Anonymous Program for people wanting to recover from eating disorders (overeating, starving and/or purging). Meetings are free, confidential, no weigh-ins or diets. Info., 387-8253. Percussion Ensembles, 8:15pm, Ford Hall, Ithaca College, Info., 274-3717 or email [email protected]. Prenatal Yoga Classes 5:30-7pm. Diane Fine. Info., [email protected] 564-3690 or dianefineyoga.com. Preschool Storytime. Tompkins County Public Library, 3-3:30pm, Thaler/Howell Programming Room. Thursdays. Pre-school-aged children (3-5years) are invited to join us for stories, songs, activities and fun, Info., 272-4557 ext. 275. Soiree/Cabaret!, 7:30pm, Schwartz Center for the Performing Arts, 430 College Ave., Ithaca, Soiree/Cabaret! will celebrate great songs and feature memorable comedy sketches in a theatrical format that will delight and surprise. Info., www.arts.cornell.edu or 607-254-ARTS for ticket information. Story Time Plus!, With Miss Lyn, The Lansing Community Library Center, 27 Auburn Rd. Lansing, 10:30am. Story Time for children ages 3-6, along with their favorite adult. Free & open to all. Info., 533-4939. Thursday Night Spaghetti Special, Dryden Community Cafe, 1 West Main St., Dryden, Our Thursday spaghetti dinner comes with a side salad and Tuscan bread for $4.95 with meatballs just a little bit extra. Info., 844-8166. Workshop: On-line Computer Based Training Overview, 10-11:30am, Tompkins Workforce New York, Center Ithaca Building. There is no cost for attending any of the workshops. However, pre-registration is required and workshop locations vary. To register: Call (607) 2727570 ext 118. 12 Friday African Drum and Dance Class, City Health Club, Downtown Ithaca, Dance 6-7:30pm Drum 7:45-9pm. Master Instructor Maurice Halton. Al-Anon, Meeting open to anyone affected by another person’s drinking. 7pm. Dryden Methodist Church. Park in Rite-Aid lot. Info 387-5701. Baritone Randie Blooding in Recital, 7pm, Hockett Family Recital Hall, Ithaca College, Info., 274-3717 or email [email protected]. "Brown Bag Lunch" 12noon, Cancer Resource Center, 612 W. State St.; A lunchtime conversation for women with cancer at any stage of treatment or recovery; bring your lunch and we’ll provide drinks and a light dessert. Info. 277-0960. Chicken and Biscuit Dinner, 5–7pm, Danby Federated Church, 1859 Danby Rd., Ithaca, Info., 272-1687, [email protected], www.danbyfederatedchurch.org. Dinner includes: Chicken and Biscuit, Squash, Green Beans, Corn, Harvard Beets, Apple Sauce, Pies and Assorted Desserts, Beverage, $8 Adult $4 Children. Cornell Cinema, WHS, 7pm, The Beaches of Agnes; 9:25pm, Where the Wild Things Are (CU Grad Students just $2); URIS, 7:15pm, The Men Who Stare at Goats; 9:20pm, Black Dynamite; $5 seniors, $4 students and kids 12 & under, $4 matinees (before 6pm), SCPA shows: $4. Info., http://cinema.cornell.edu. Darwin Days Reception, 7pm-9pm, Museum of the Earth, Trumansburg Rd., Ithaca, A lively birthday gathering with appetizers, desserts and wine featuring a sneak peek of our upcoming exhibit. Tickets $10, Call 273-6623 x11. Elective Sophomore Recital: Shaina Zevallos, bassoon, 8:15pm, Nabenhauer Recital Room, Ithaca College, Info., 274-3717 or email [email protected]. Fish Fry and Prime Rib, 4-7pm, Dryden Veterans Memorial Home. Fish Fry: $10 includes choice of baked potato or mac n’ cheese and salad bar. Prime Rib: $12/Queen, $16/King. Includes salad bar and baked potato. GIAC Teen Program After Hours Spot 4-midnight. Movies, open gym, game room, video games, snacks, computers, skating & more. 272-3622 318 N. Albany St., Ithaca. Interlaken Reformed Church Pantry, 3–6pm. Free, fresh produce, breads, desserts, dairy and deli. For low to moderate incomes, www.friendshipdonations.org. LaTourelle Friday Lunch Club, 1-2:30pm, Agatha Christie joins us for lunch, as the characters and events from some of her tales make luncheon at La Tourelle a repast to remember, For more information or to make a reservation, call 607-273-2734. Lecture, 5pm, CU Lewis Auditorium, Goldwin Smith Hall, “Constructing Biodiversity: From Darwin to the Cambrian Explosion” with Dr. Douglas Erwin, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution. Library Lovers Month Book Fair, Friday, February 1215, 2010, Barnes & Noble, The Bookery, Buffalo Street Books, Colophon Books, Comics for Collectors and The Cornell Store, Watch for musical performances and storytimes and the opportunity to support the library. For information and to download book fair coupons visit www.tcpl.org/foundation. Lifelong Schedule, 8:30–9:30AM, Enhance Fitness®, Lifelong, 119 W. Court Street, Ithaca; 9–10AM, Enhance Fitness®, Ellis Hollow Road Apartments, Tenants only; 9–10AM, Enhance Fitness®, Juniper Manor I, 24 Elm St., Trumansburg; 9–10:30AM, Knitting Circle, All Levels Welcome; 9-12:45PM, Duplicate Bridge Class, Beginner and Intermediate Lessons and Practice Play; Seats Available; 9–1AM, Free Tax Preparation for Seniors Citizens, People with Limited Incomes, and Individuals with Disabilities, by appointment only. Call 273-1511 to schedule an appointment; 9:30–10:30AM, Strength Training @ St. Catherine of Siena Parish Hall, Room 3, 302 St. Catherine Circle, Ithaca; 10–11AM, Chair Yoga; 10:15–11:15AM, Enhance Fitness®, Enfield Community Building, 168 Enfield Main Rd.; 11:30–1PM, T’ai Chi Class, All levels welcome; 1–3PM, Mahjong; 23PM, Enhance Fitness®, McGraw House Annex, 211 S Geneva St.; 2–4PM, Square, Round, Line & Polka Dancing, Info., www.tclifelong.org. Loaves & Fishes Community Kitchen, St. John's Church, 210 N Cayuga Street. Noon to 1pm. Meals and hospitality. Open to all, no limitations or requirements. www.loaves.org. Movie Night, 6:30-8pm, Borders Books, The Shops at Ithaca Mall, We’ll show movies that appeal to kids age 510, 257-0444. Movie Night, 6pm, Southside Community Center, 305 S. Plain St Ithaca, 273-4190 x225, Jan 25th-May 24th, Double feature with dinner included, Info., [email protected]. New England Contra and Square Dance, 8-11pm, Bethel Grove Community Center, NYS Rt. 79, about 4 miles east of Ithaca. For more information: Ted Crane, 607-2738678 or on the web at www.tedcrane.com/TCCD. Night Hikes, 7:30pm, Cayuga Nature Center. Hike our wooded trails, under the big sky of our back fields or around our ponds. No need for a flashlight. Donations appreciated. Info. www.cayuganaturecenter.org. Objects in the Mirror, 8pm, Kitchen Theatre Company, Clinton House, 116 N. Cayuga St., Cost: $15-$17, for ages 16 and over, tickets: 800-284-8422, Info., 2720403 or www.kitchentheatre.org. Opening Reception at the Johnson Museum, 5pm, Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, Cornell University Central & University Aves., Ithaca, See all the new exhibitions, plus refreshments, live music, family art activities, and more. Info., 255-6464, www.museum.cornell.edu. Pajamarama Storytime, 7pm, Barnes & Noble, Join us for stories for preschool & elementary age children. Juice & snacks provided, Info., 273-6784 or www.BN.com. Pete Panek & the Bluecats, 7-9pm, Dryden Community Cafe, Main St., Dryden. Preschool Story Time, 10am, Southworth Library, Dryden, For preschoolers and their caregivers. Come for stories, crafts and snacks. Info. 844-4782. Rookie Reader Storytime, Barnes & Noble, 10:30am. Join us for stories perfect for infants & toddlers. Activities will follow. Info 273-6784 or www.BN.com. Soiree/Cabaret!, 7:30pm, Schwartz Center for the Performing Arts, 430 College Ave., Ithaca, Soiree/Cabaret! will celebrate great songs and feature memorable comedy sketches in a theatrical format that will delight and surprise. Info., www.arts.cornell.edu or 607-254-ARTS for ticket information. Square Dance Fun Nights, 7:30-9:30, Newfield Elementary School Cafeteria. Come, dance with SquareA-Naders, learn of opportunity for modern western square dance lessons, Info: 387-6314, Free. Workshop: Interviewing for Results, 10-11:30am, Tompkins Workforce New York, Center Ithaca Building. There is no cost for attending any of the workshops. However, pre-registration is required and workshop locations vary. To register: Call (607) 272-7570 ext 118. Yoga for People with Cancer, 10:30am-12noon, Island Health & Fitness. Gentle stretching, relaxation exercises, healing visualizations, and meditation. For information, contact instructor Nick Boyar at 272-2062 or Sharon Kaplan at 277-0960 $10 per class. Scholarship available through the Cancer Resource Center. 13 Saturday 8th Annual Mardi Gras Celebration on Cayuga Lake Wine Trail, Advance tickets: $25 per person plus handling fee and sales tax. Designated Driver tickets: $20 per person plus handling fee and sales tax. $30 plus sales tax. AARP – Safe Driving Classes, 9am-1pm, and March 20th, 9am-1pm, At Lifelong, 119 W. Court St., Ithaca, To register call: 273-1511, AARP members $12, Non-members, $14. Animal Feeding, Cayuga Nature Center. Noon. Feel free to visit CNC as our animal volunteers feed our many animals, then hike one of our trails or visit the tree house. Free for members, low cost to visitors. Info www.cayuganaturecenter.org. Clay Painting Workshop, 10:30-11:30am, The Kitschen Sink, 210 Elmira Road, Ithaca, Artist Ann Harper of Hand i Nature Pottery leads this workshop where you paint clay magnets. A variety of kinds will be available (cats, fish, owls, hearts). Cost: $10 with VIT pass, $15 without pass. NOTE: Because these will need to be fired in a kiln they will not be available for pickup before February 20. Info., 277-4914, www.kitschensinkithaca.com. Cornell Cinema, WHS, 2pm, Where the Wild Things Are ($3 adults/$2 kids 12 & under); 5pm, The Garden; 7:15pm, Coco Before Chanel; 9:30pm, Monty Python and the Holy Grail; URIS, 7:15pm, Black Dynamite; 9:15pm, The Men Who Stare at Goats; $5 seniors, $4 students and kids 12 & under, $4 matinees (before 6pm), SCPA shows: $4. Info., http://cinema.cornell.edu. Cornell Music, 8PM, Sage Chapel, David Yearsley, organ, with Martin Davids, guest violinist Features music and improvisations devoted to joy, wonder, hatred, desire, sadness, and love. Info., http://music.cornell.edu. Cultura Storyteller Series, Mexico, 1-2:30pm, Thaler/Howell Children’s Programming Room, Tompkins County Library, Sessions are 1.5 hours each and consist of storytelling during the first half, and a related art activity during the second half. For more information contact Carolina Osorio Gil at [email protected] or (607)227-2334. Dances of Universal Peace: 7:15pm, Foundation of Light, 391 Turkey Hill Road, Ithaca. Celebrating the world’s spiritual traditions through music, song and dance, Live Music, No experience required, $5 donation requested, Every 1st Saturday, Info: 272-7582. Darwin Family Day, 11am-3pm, Museum of the Earth, 1259 Trumansburg Rd., Ithaca, Take a voyage through the Museum with fun crafts, experiments, and presentations along the way, Included with Museum admission. Free for members. Explorers Storytime 11am at Borders Books in Pyramid Mall, 257-0444. Families Learning Science Together, Thaler Howell Programming Room, Tompkins County Public Library, 2nd Saturday of the month, 1-2PM. Info., (607) 2548256 or [email protected]. Family Storytime, Tompkins County Public Library, 11:30am-Noon, Thaler/Howell Programming Room. Saturdays. Children of all ages and their caregivers are invited to join us for exciting stories, lively music and family-friendly fun. Info., 272-4557 ext. 275. Fossil ID Day, Museum of the Earth, 1259 Trumansburg Rd, Ithaca, 10am-Noon. Info 273-6623 or www.museumoftheearth.org. Fresh Food Pantry, Worker’s Center- Linderman Creek, Comm. Rm, #1 at 12:30pm-1pm; 2nd Saturday of the month. For low to moderate incomes, Info., www.friendshipdonations.org. Friends of the Library Book Sale, Accepting Donations for Spring Sale. 9am-Noon, 509 Esty Street, Ithaca. More info. www.booksale.org or 272-2223. Getting Started with Livestock, 12:30-4:30pm, Human Services Complex, 323 Owego St., Montour Falls, This workshop will cover the essentials of caring for a variety of domestic livestock, including grazing management and equipment needs. Reservations are appreciated by contacting Schuyler CCE at 607-535-7161, or by emailing [email protected] GIAC Teen Program After Hours Spot 4-midnight. 318 N. Albany St.. Ithaca, Music, movies, open gym, game room, video games, computers, skating & more. Info., 272-3622. Greg Behrendt, 8pm, State Theatre, State St., Ithaca, Advance $19.50, Day of Show $23.00, Appeared many times on The Tonight Show and Late Night with Conan O’Brien. His stand-up special, Greg Behrendt is Uncool, debuted on Comedy Central in January 2006. Behrendt co-wrote “He’s Just Not That Into You,” and was also a consultant for the HBO sitcom Sex and the City. Info., www.stateofithaca.com. Hand Drumming for Humans Classes, 3-4pm, Soma Yoga & Living Arts 409 West State Street. Ithaca, First timers buy one get one free, $10hr, Info., [email protected] or www.somayogaithaca.com. Iron Horse, 9pm-1am, Crossroads, Lansing, grand opening night. Ithaca College Concerts: Theodora Hanslowe, mezzo-soprano, Dennis Giauque, piano, 8:15pm, Ford Hall, Ithaca College, Info., 274-3717 or email [email protected]. Ithaca Farmer's Indoor Winter Market, 11am-2pm, Women’s Community Building, Ithaca, For more information call 273-7109 or www.ithacamarket.com. Jazz Dance Class, 11am, Finger Lakes Fitness Center, 171 E. State St., Center Ithaca, lower level, Beginners. Nonmembers & drop-ins welcome. Info., 256-3532. Jazzercise Dance Fitness: 8:30 & 9:30am, 3100 N. Triphammer Rd., Lansing. Aerobic dance, strength and stretching set to a variety of music. Ages 16+, 288-4040, www.jazzercise.com. Lifelong Schedule, 9–12PM, Men’s Group, Newcomers Welcome; 9–1PM, AARP Safe Driving Course, by appointment only. Call 273-1511; 9AM–4PM, Mon.– Fri. to schedule an appointment; 9–1PM, Free Tax Preparation for Seniors Citizens, People with Limited Incomes, and Individuals with Disabilities, by appointment only. Call 273-1511 to schedule an appointment; 9:15AM, Lifelong Radio Show (WHCU 870 AM) Co-hosts Jillian Pendleton and Greta Colavito; 1:30–3:30PM, Saturday Writing Group, All levels welcome. Info., www.tclifelong.org. Marcellus Shale 101: How will the gas drilling affect us? 2pm, Ulysses Philomathic Library, Trumansburg. Steve Hoffman, Chairman, Committee to Preserve the Finger Lakes. Objects in the Mirror, 8pm, Kitchen Theatre Company, Clinton House, 116 N. Cayuga St., Cost: $15-$17, for ages 16 and over, tickets: 800-284-8422, Info., 2720403 or www.kitchentheatre.org. One Heart Community Drummers, Open Community Drum Circle, 5pm, Lehman Alternative Community School, 111 Chestnut Street, Ithaca, Plenty of extra drums to share, Info., www.oneheartcommunitydrumming.org. “Our Brothers, Our Sisters’ Table” hot cooked community meal, 12noon, served at the Salvation Army, 150 N. Albany St. Ithaca. All welcome, No income guidelines. Overeaters Anonymous, Henry St. John Building, 301 S. Geneva St., #103, corner W. Clinton St., 11am12:15pm. 12 Steps & 12 Traditions meeting. Overeaters Anonymous is a worldwide 12 Step Anonymous Program for people wanting to recover from eating disorders (overeating, starving and/or purging). Meetings are free, confidential, no weigh-ins or diets. Newcomers always welcome. Info 387-8253. Prime Time Funk, 8pm, Center for the Arts of Homer, doors open at 7pm, For information: www.center4art.org. Primitive Pursuits Winter Camp 2010, SaturdayWednesday, February 13-17, 9:00am-3pm, 4-H Acres, 418 Lower Creek Road, Ithaca, Youth ages 6-14 are invited to put on snow pants and get outside this February during winter break. Run, Play, Laugh and practice the skills of shelter, water, fire and food. Each day before you head home to collapse on your couch you will build fires, make wild tea, track animals, cook over a bed of coals and much more! Cost: Choose from three options: #1) Saturday and Sunday $95; #2) Monday to Wednesday $145; #3) Saturday to Wednesday Save! $195$250 (self-determined sliding scale) *Staff will be on site from 8:30am? 3:30pm. To register, or for more information, go to www.primitivepursuits.net, or call Cornell Cooperative Ext., of Tompkins County 272-2292, ext. 195. Showtime! Chocolate, Vanilla and Strawberry, 23pm, Sciencenter, 601 First St., Ithaca, Info., 272-0600 or www.sciencenter.org. Secular Organizations for Sobriety Meeting, 2pm, Unitarian Church Offices, Basement at Aurora and Buffalo Streets, S.O.S offers a secular approach to recovery based on self-empowerment and individual responsibility for one's sobriety. Seidaiko “Taiko” Japanese Drum Classes, World Seishi Karate, 4pm. For ongoing students. Info [email protected] or 277-1047. 989 Dryden Rd. (in Varna). Small-Scale Farming Class: "Intro to Livestock Farming", 12:30-4:30pm, Schuyler County Cooperative Extension, Human Services Complex, Rt. 14, Montour Falls. This workshop for homesteaders or prospective small farmers covers how to raise beef, swine, sheep, goats, and poultry on pasture, and the basics of animal care. Led by livestock specialists Heather Birdsall and Kerri Bartlett. Fee: $8/person or $15/couple for each class. To register or for information, call TOMPKINS County Cooperative Extension at (607) 272-2292 ext. 126. Soiree/Cabaret!, 2pm & 7:30pm, Schwartz Center for the Performing Arts, 430 College Ave., Ithaca, Soiree/Cabaret! will celebrate great songs and feature memorable comedy sketches in a theatrical format that will delight and surprise. Info., www.arts.cornell.edu or 607-254-ARTS for ticket information. Theodora Hanslowe, Mezzo-Soprano, 8:15pm, Ford Hall, Ithaca College, Info., www.ithaca.edu/music/icc. Tickets: 273-4497 or 800-284-8422. Toddlers Yoga, Namasts Montessori School, 11:45pm. Walkers-3. Info 273-1673 or [email protected]. 1608 Trumansburg Rd. Trail Blazers, 10am-2pm, Lime Hollow Center, 3091 Gracie Rd., Cortland, 2nd Saturday of month. Teens help clearing, roughing trails & building bridges. Grades 6-12 age 11-18. Fee for pizza. Info., 758-5462. Valentine's Bake Sale, 8am-2pm, Newfield Public Library, 198 Main St., Pick up a treat for your sweetie at the library's Valentine's Bake Sale. A raffle will be held at the end of the sale for a "Curl Up With a Cup of Tea" gift basket. Tickets can be purchased the day of the bake sale and the week before at the library. Valentine’s Dinner and Dance, 6:30–9pm, It’ll be a sweetheart of a meal, $5 for the meal and dancing, Danby Federated Church, 1859 Danby Rd., Ithaca, Call Charlene Testut at 273-0759 or the church at 272-1687 for reservations, Open to the community, Info., 272-1687, [email protected], www.danbyfederatedchurch.org. Workers Center, Linderman Creek, Community Room #1 at noon, Every 2nd Saturday. Red Cross shelter and pantry. 14 Sunday 8th Annual Mardi Gras Celebration on Cayuga Lake Wine Trail, Advance tickets: $25 per person plus handling fee and sales tax. Designated Driver tickets: $20 per person plus handling fee and sales tax. At the door: $30 plus sales tax. ARTS Anonymous, 6PM, Skylight Room, Tompkins County Mental Health Bldg, 201 E. Green St., side entrance, for anyone interested in enhancing their creativity, Contact: 607-277-4296. Bound For Glory Show, Mustard’s Retreat, Sunday night from 8-11, with live set at 8:30, 9:30, and 10:30. All three sets are different. Come to as many sets as you wish. Admission in the live audience at Anabel Taylor is free and is open to everyone in the area. Kids are always welcome. Refreshments are available. For further information, call Phil Shapiro at 844-4535, or e-mail [email protected]. Find out about upcoming Bound for Glory shows, and about how you can help, by joining the Friends of Bound for Glory. Look up http://wvbr.com on the Web. Breakfast Buffet, 8am-noon, Varna Community Center, 943 Dryden Road, All you can eat, ham, bacon, hash browns scrambled eggs, fruit, coffee cakes juice, pancakes, french toast, beverage. Cayuga Trails Club Event, Join the Cayuga Trails and Cayuga Nordic Ski clubs to ski or hike at Lime Hollow. Beginning skiiers welcome. Meet at 10AM, Dunkin Donuts, Dryden. For more information call 242-5790 or visit www.cayugatrailsclub.org. Chicken Barbecue, 11am till gone, Enfield Volunteer Fire Co., 172 Enfield Main Rd., Adult meals $8, Childrens meals $5, The Ladies Auxiliary holds a Bake Sale at each BBQ. There will be a 2010 Prize Drawing for a Flat screen TV which will be held on Sunday, April 11th. Cornell Cinema, WHS, 4:30pm, Where the Wild Things Are; 7:15pm, Coco Before Chanel; $5 seniors, $4 students and kids 12 & under, $4 matinees (before 6pm), SCPA shows: $4. Info., http://cinema.cornell.edu. Cornell Music, 8PM, Barnes Hall, Guest Artist/Alum, John Nam, jazz piano with CU Jazz Ensembles, Paul Merrill, director, Enjoy "Jazz for Valentine's Day". Info., http://music.cornell.edu. Elective Freshman Recital: Virginia Dodge, oboe/English horn, 7pm, Nabenhauer Recital Room, Ithaca College, Info., 274-3717 or email [email protected]. Elective Graduate Recital: Jon Romey, double bass, 9pm, Nabenhauer Recital Room, Ithaca College, Info., 274-3717 or email [email protected]. Elective Senior Recital: Peter Falango, trombone, 3pm, Nabenhauer Recital Room, Ithaca College, Info., 274-3717 or email [email protected]. Jazzercise Dance Fitness: 9am & 10am, 3100 N. Triphammer Rd., Lansing. Aerobic dance, strength and stretching set to a variety of music, Ages 16+, Info., 2884040, Info., www.jazzercise.com. Junior Recital: Jennifer Fox, Trumpet, 4pm, Hockett Family Recital Hall, Ithaca College, Info., 274-3717 or email [email protected]. Kripalu Yoga at the Cafe, 4-5:30pm, Dryden Community Cafe, Main St., Dryden, Yoga mats and other props are provided. A 'starter card' is $40 for three lessons and a mat. Please contact Brenda for more details at 607-835-6691 or via email at [email protected]. Master Class: Theodora Hanslowe, mezzo-soprano, Dennis Giauque, piano, 1pm, Hockett Family Recital Hall, Ithaca College, Vocal Master Class, Info., 274-3717 or email [email protected]. Objects in the Mirror, 4pm, Kitchen Theatre Company, Clinton House, 116 N. Cayuga St., Cost: $15-$17, for ages 16 and over, tickets: 800-284-8422, Info., 2720403 or www.kitchentheatre.org. Overlook Apartments Food Pantry, Community Room, noon-1pm, visit www.friendshipdonation.org for dates. Reception for Artist Maggie Hart, 7:30pm, Dryden Community Center Cafe, Main St., Dryden, Info., Call 607844-1500 or visit drydencafe.org. Recovering Couples Anonymous, 5pm, Upstairs @ 518 W. Seneca St., Ithaca, RCA is a 12-step group for couples wanting to restore commitment, communication & caring in their relationships. Open to all. Soiree/Cabaret!, 2pm & 7:30pm, Schwartz Center for the Performing Arts, 430 College Ave., Ithaca, Soiree/Cabaret! will celebrate great songs and feature memorable comedy sketches in a theatrical format that will delight and surprise. Info., www.arts.cornell.edu or 607-254-ARTS for ticket information. Strega Nona, 3pm, State Theatre, State St., Ithaca, Adult $15, Senior $12, Child $10, Based on the children's book by Tomie dePaola, Strega Nona is the musical tale of a friendly magical witch who strives to cure the ills of her tiny Italian town of Calabria. Info., www.stateofithaca.com. Taoist Tai Chi, 9am-10:30am, 1201 N. Tioga Street, Information at, www.ithaca.newyork.usa.taoist.org. Tot Spot, 3:30-5:30pm, Ithaca Youth Bureau, Now thru Late April. Indoor stay and play for children 5 months to 5 years & their caregivers. Fee. Info 273-8364. Vagina Monologues sponsored by IC Players and IC Feminisits, 8-10pm, Ithaca College, "Every year IC Players puts on a production of Vagina Monologues with help from IC Feminists. Proceeds go the Advocacy Center of Ithaca." Info., [email protected]. Winter Birds, 1-2pm, Cayuga Nature Center, 1420 Taughannock Blvd., Ithaca, cost $3, Info., 273-6260 or www.cayuganaturecenter.org. Winter Camp, Cayuga Nature Center, February 14-19th, For the first time, we are offering camp by the day. campers will have the opportunity to go sledding, snowshoeing, maple sugaring, build snow shelters, learn about our live animals, enjoy a cup of hot chocolate by the fireplace, and maybe even track dinosaurs through the snow. 15 Monday Abovo Studio School February Kids Atelier Three Days of Drawing and Printing, 9AM-12PM, 136 The Commons, Ithaca, Students will gain momentum in their drawing skills and learn about the possibilities for printing and publishing their work. In this workshop there will be two studio blocks each day. The internal concerns of the morning are to be balanced with the nuts and bolts and sometimes more freewheeling process of print-making in the second morning session. Info., http://abovoagogo.com, 273-4120. Advanced Cancer Group, 10:30-11:30am, Cancer Resource Center,612 West State St, Every Monday except holidays. Drop in support for people who have been diagnosed with cancer. No registration necessary. Info., 277-0960. Baby Storytime, 10:30-11am, Tompkins Co. Public Library, Caregivers and newborns up to 15 months old are invited to join us each Monday in the Thaler/Howell Programming Room for stories, songs, and togetherness. For more info, 272-4557 ext. 275. Children’s Tap, 4pm, Southside Community Center, 305 S. Plain St Ithaca, 273-4190 x225, ages 5-8, Jan 25th-May 24th, Info., [email protected]. Continuing Beginning Ballet for Adults, 5:30–7:30pm, CSMA, 330 E. Martin Luther King Jr./State St., drop-ins welcome, Nathanielsz Dance Studio, Instructor, Miranda Strichartz. Cornell Cinema, WHS, 7pm, Monty Python and the Holy Grail; 9pm, The Men Who Stare at Goats; $5 seniors, $4 students and kids 12 & under, $4 matinees (before 6pm), SCPA shows: $4. Info., http://cinema.cornell.edu. Cortland Jazzercise, 4:45 and 6 pm, 241 McLean Road, next to Grand Rental, Info., jazzercise.com or call 607288-4040 ([email protected]). Cortland Youth Center, Open from 12-9pm. Info: www.cortland.org/youth or call 753-0872. Elective Joint Recital: Steven Vaughn, euphonium & Kevin Kozik, tuba, 9pm, Nabenhauer Recital Room, Info., 274-3717 or email Ithaca College, [email protected]. GIAC Teen Program 4-7pm, 318 N. Albany St., Ithaca, Game Room, Video Games, Open Gym & Field Trips Hatha Yoga w/Dr. Kasia, 6-7:20pm, World Seishi Karate, 989 Dryden Rd., Varna, Info.,277-1047 or [email protected]. Intro to ProTools Audio Recording Software, 4:306pm, Southside Community Center, 305 S. Plain St Ithaca, 273-4190 x225, Info., [email protected]. Jazz Dance Classes with Nancy Gaspar, 7:15pm, Finger Lakes Fitness Center, 171 E. State St., Center Ithaca, Nonmembers & drop-ins welcome. Info 256-3532. Jazzercise, 5:45 & 6:45pm, 119 W Court St., Ithaca. Jazzercise combines dance, resistance training, pilates, yoga, kickboxing and more to create programs for people of every age and fitness level. More info. 288-4040 or www.jazzercise.com. Knowledge is Power, 6pm, group for those who have been in abusive relationships, For info., 277-3203. Kundalini Yoga Classes, 7:30-9pm, Ahimsa Yoga Center, Dewitt Mall , Info., 760-5386. Loaves & Fishes Community Kitchen, Noon-1pm, St. John's Church, 210 N Cayuga St., Meals and hospitality. no limitations or requirements. Info., www.loaves.org. Overeaters Anonymous, 7:30-8:30pm, Henry St. John Building, 301 S. Geneva St., #103, corner W. Clinton St., Speakers meeting, Meetings are free, confidential, no weigh-ins or diets. Info., 387-8253. Personal Defense, 7:30-8:30pm, World Seishi Karate, 989 Dryden Rd., Info., [email protected] or 277-1047. Post Traumatic Stress Disorder Meeting, 6PM (holidays excluded), The First Baptist Church, Dewitt Park, PTSD Ithaca is an independent, Post Traumatic Stress Disorder support, social, educational and self-help group to assist those individuals who have been diagnosed with or think they may have PTSD. Pre-School Story Hour and Craft, 10am, The SPCA Annex at The Shops at Ithaca Mall. Shakuhachi Flute w/Senpai Kim, 6:30-7:30pm, World Seishi Karate, 989 Dryden Rd. (in Varna), Info., [email protected] or 277-1047. The Grady Girls, 7:30pm, The Shop, 312 Seneca St., Ithaca, Irish Traditional Music. Vitamin L Winter Recess Concert, 1pm, Unitarian Church, Corner of Buffalo and North Aurora St., Ithaca, $5 optional but appreciated donation. Info: 273-4175, www.vitaminL.org. Winter Sprouts, 10-11am, Mama Goose, 430 W. State St., Ithaca, Join the Ithaca Children’s Garden at Mama Goose for stories and hands-on gardening activities every Monday in January and February. For children ages 2-5 and their caregivers. Free, For directions to Mama Goose, visit their website: www.mamagooseithaca.com. Submit Your Calendar Listing: • visit tompkinsweekly.com and click on submissions • email: [email protected] • fax 607-347-4302 • write: Tompkins Weekly PO Box 6404, Ithaca, NY 14851 Tompkins Weekly February 8 13 Time to Get Growing with Native Plants By Daniel Segal This is the latest installment in our Signs of Sustainability series, organized by Sustainable Tompkins. Visit them online at www.sustainabletompkins.org. In less than a month (March 5 and 6) Ithaca will host its second annual Designing with Native Plants Symposium at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. The event was founded and is run by Rick Manning, ASLA, and Daniel Segal of The Plantsmen Nursery. The symposium focuses on core issues of sustainability in landscaping at all stages, from landscape design to planting, and the fundamental role of native plants in this field. (See below for details about content for each day.) Traditionally, the primary goal of horticulture has been aesthetics in the broadest sense. Gardens were made to please us and be pretty. Gradually, as we have learned more about ecology and the intricate relationships that link all organisms in nature, a movement has grown around the idea that gardens can offer habitat and refuge to plants and wildlife alike. The most significant aspects of this movement are that we begin to adjust our gardening techniques to maximize ecological benefit and minimize environmental impact, and that we work with native species, with their well being in mind. While those may seem like common sense ideas, think of the Gardens at Versailles or other traditional approaches to horticulture — they may be impressive, but they don’t often relate back to nature. And for today’s modern landscapes especially, we can evaluate them for their dependence on costly, resource-based maintenance (mowing, spraying, irrigation, dependence on synthetic fertilizers). Mainstream horticulture today, like most industries, has followed the path of marketing and mass production. Casualties of this model include the almost total loss of genetic diversity, and the consolidation of plant production which eliminates many small nurseries that just can’t compete with the tactics, labor strategies, budgets and marketing blitzes of large corporations. This model rewards the marketing company who brands a product line of plants, and the larger garden centers who fall in line with them, but punishes the independent small-scale local grower. The initial success of Ithaca’s Designing with Native Plants Symposium directly reflects the interest in alternatives to horticulture’s current marketing/mass production model. The event sold out in its first year (110 plus a waiting list). This year we begin a two-day format: Friday, March 5, is geared more toward professionals in the industry (designers, architects, contractors, engineers, or the more advanced gardener), and Saturday, March 6, is geared more toward homeowners, beginning professionals and anyone with an interest in native plants or sustainable landscaping. Most speakers are local and are professionals in fields including horticulture, ecology, stormwater management, climate change and its effect on plants, using native plants to support native birds, erosion control, green roofs, and progressive landscaping techniques for small-scale implementation. Other presenters are coming from New Jersey and southeast Pennsylvania, areas where larger populations have spawned a greater interest in natural landscaping techniques for the purpose of mitigating and minimizing impacts of development. The symposium can register 100105 people for each day. At press time, approximately 90 people are registered (each day is almost half full). It is expected to sell out. The symposium is a non-profit fundraiser for the Cayuga Waterfront Trail Initiative (CWTI). This project is an attempt to link certain existing but unconnected green and public spaces along the south end of Cayuga Lake. Some particular facets of the trail project that relate to the Native Plants Symposium are the Bird Garden and kiosk at Cass Park, efforts to reduce mowing and encourage meadow habitats along various parts of the trail, and possible long term goals toward ecological management of Stewart Park and the waterfront. For information and registration link visit the Cayuga Waterfront Trail website at www.cayugawaterfronttrail.com. Daniel Segal is owner of The Plantsmen Nursery (www.plantsmen.com) and co-organizer of Ithaca’s Designing with Native Plants Symposium. Historians was ever published, but it got us started and got us thinking about what else we could do. What I most appreciate about the group,” she says, “is the encouragement for our individual projects and the support, both in learning new techniques and in learning new skills.” The public is always welcome at MHTC meetings. The next one will be held Saturday, Feb. 20, at 1 p.m. at the History Center of Tompkins County in Ithaca. Copies of the Destination brochures can be found on the Web site Continued from page 1 While some, like County Historian Carol Kammen, have extensive formal training, it doesn’t mean that the others are any less dedicated or scholarly in their approach. Enfield Historian Susan Thompson has been involved with the MHTC since the beginning. She recalls that the first MHTC project was researching news reports and diaries for the year 1901. “Nothing It’s Coming... February 8th, 2010 marks the 100th Anniversary of the Boy Scouts of America. Join Scouts from Tompkins & Cortland Counties in a 100th Anniversary Celebration, Saturday, February 20th at The Shops at Ithaca Mall Featuring a District-Wide Pinewood Derby! For more information on scouting in our area, contact District Executive Sean Butterworth at 607-648-7888, or visit www.tompkinscortlandscouts.org Taughannock District, Baden-Powell Council, Boy Scouts of America 14 Tompkins Weekly February 8 Classifieds Antiques Significant Elements Architectural Salvage Warehouse: Great resource for old house parts, such as recycled doors, lighting, hardware, tubs and lots more. 212 Center St. Ithaca. Open Tues -Sat. 607-2773450 www.significantelements.org . The Collection Antiques One of the largest selections of quality antiques in the Finger Lakes Thurs-Sun 1-5 • 387-6579 9 W. Main St., Rt. 96, Trumansburg Ithaca Antique Center President’s Weekend Sale 15-20% OFF February 19, 20 and 21st www.ithacaantiquecenter.com 1607 Trumansburg Rd • 607-272-3611 PONZI'S 18th & 19th Centur y Countr y & Formal Furniture & Accessories RESTORATION AVAIL ABLE THIS WEEK at SewGreen Feb 8 thru Feb 14 Tuesday, Feb 9, 6 to 8 pm: Beginning Sewing I Thursday, Feb 11, 6 to 8 pm: Beginning Sewing II Saturday, Feb 13, 1 to 4 pm: Sewing Clinic Bring projects you need help with, clothing you want to refashion, etc. Basic sewing experience is required. Bring your own machine or use one of ours. SEWING FOR ALL AGES Details: www.sew-green.org The Cancer Resource Center seeks compassionate volunteers to provide support for people with cancer. Sharon Kaplan [email protected] Women’s Opportunity Center offers employment and computer training services to low income parents and displaced homemakers of Tompkins County. Check us out to find out if you qualify at 315 North Tioga St, 607-272-1520 www.womensopportuntycenter.org Volunteers Needed: Contact Southworth Library, W. Main St., Dryden. Call 844-4782 for info. Automotive • Refinishings • Repair Work • New & Old State Street, Ithaca, NY 14850. E-Mail: [email protected] Phone: (607) 257-5263. Fax: (607) 216-0902. Writers Wanted - Interested in writing for Tompkins Weekly? We’re looking to expand our group of writers. Contact Editor Jay Wrolstad, 607-539-7100 or email [email protected] Shortstop Deli Open 24/7 at 204 W. Seneca St., Ithaca 273-1030 www.shortstopdeli.com Two Locations to Serve You Best GreenStar 701 W. Buffalo St. 2739392 & 215 N. Cayuga St 273-8210 Education Ithaca Rentals & Renovations, Inc. Apartments - All Kinds! All Sizes! Office: 323 N Tioga St., Ithaca 2731654 www.ithaca-rentals.com Did you know that New Roots Charter School students help prepare healthy, delicious school lunches featuring local, organic food? NEW ROOTS ….or your old school. . .YOU CHOOSE. ROOTS Rocks! For more information or to come to a Parent and Teen Information Night, call New Roots Public Charter High School in Ithaca at 607-882-9220; or visit www.newrootsschool.org For Rent Insulation Wiles Guitar Studio Suzuki Guitar Lessons Childr en thru Adults Community Cor ners Ithaca 592-2591 Seconds on Court is a training program through the Women’s Opportunity Center and a boutique that sells new and used clothing to the public! Check us out at 110 West Court Street, www.secondsoncourt.com 256-9957 Merchandise For Sale Entertainment Paul and Connie Polce 9838 Congress St., Ext. Trumansburg, NY 14886 607-387-5248 Open Daily 9-5 www.ponzisantiques.com Food and Drink Lunch Delivery - Free Lunch Delivery from the Ithaca Bakery M-F 11am-2pm. Call 27-BAGEL. Announcements Did you know that New Roots Public Charter High School is now enrolling ninth, tenth, and eleventh grade students for the 2010-2011 school year? Did you know that students from 15 regional school districts attend New Roots? NEW ROOTS ….or your old school. . .YOU CHOOSE. ROOTS Rocks! For more information or to come to a Parent and Teen Information Night, call New Roots at 607-8829220; or visit www.newrootsschool.org Photography Book your Family Portrait. Also wedding and Resume Photos. Call Studio 97 Photography by Kathy Morris 277-5656. Employment We're growing our staff. Nurse Practitioner, Billing Specialist, Front Desk Receptionist, Certified Medical Assistants Full-Time. Benefits include: Blue Shield Medical, Dental, Vision and 401K Plan. Generous vacation and personal time. Come join our growing team, serving Ithaca and the surrounding communities for 33 years. Family Medicine Associates of Ithaca 209 West Sell It Fast! We'll run your classified line ad for only $5! (per 10 words) Mail to: Tompkins Weekly Classifieds, PO Box 6404 Ithaca NY 14851, fax this form to: 607-347-4302, (Questions? Call 607-327-1226) or enter your classified information from our website www.tompkinsweekly.com 1.Category:__________________________________________________ 2.Message:___________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________ 3. Place in Issues Dates (We publish on Mondays): _______________________ 4. Choose: Line Classified ad: $5/10 words (25 cents for each additional word) and/or Display Classified ad = $15.00 per column inch (One Column: 23/8" wide) 5. Total Enclosed: ___________________________ (Pre-payment is required for classified ads. We welcome cash, check or money order. Deadline is 1pm Wednesday prior to publication). 6. We cannot print your ad without the following information. It will be kept strictly confidential. Name:____________________________ Ph:_______________________ Address:_____________________________________________________ Tompkins Weekly February 8 15 New Patients Welcome Dr. Marne O’Shae, Jane Schantz, FNP and Jeannie Trujillo FNP-C invite you to discover the caring difference at their practice at 402 N. Cayuga St., Ithaca Accepting most major insurances Call 607-273-5551 or email [email protected] 16 Tompkins Weekly February 8