Editorial: School and game, tied for first
Ithaca College is not a place that many would expect to frequently pump out professional athletes — and it doesn’t.
Ithaca College is not a place that many would expect to frequently pump out professional athletes — and it doesn’t.
As Ithaca College makes the shift to online course override forms, it joins schools such as Michigan State University and the University of Massachusetts Amherst in digitizing higher education’s registration process.
While it’s valid to question whether or not Ithaca College should renovate Butterfield Stadium to have a new turf field, which would put athletes on the frontline with Division III competition, the more pressing question should be what the college can do to improve the conditions its academic buildings.
In the wake of racially charged issues, such as the killing of Trayvon Martin and the Supreme Court’s invalidation of Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act, it is disheartening that so few white people attended the 50th Anniversary March on Washington.
Many first-year students do not know what they want to major in, let alone what “theme” should guide their college careers.
President Barack Obama stopped at Binghamton University’s campus on Friday, as part of a two-day tour, to speak about college affordability.
For the second time in the past five years, Ithaca College has suffered a housing mishap because it over-enrolled the number of incoming first-year students.
The landmarks of the past academic year have centered on Ithaca College’s search for a future.