03 10 14 entire issue lo res

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INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 130, No. 103

MONDAY, MARCH 10, 2014

!

ITHACA, NEW YORK

16 Pages – Free

News

Arts

Sports

Weather

Week for Women

Terrific Tunes

Carry a Big Stick

Snow Showers HIGH: 41° LOW: 31º

The Cornell Panhellenic Association will host Women’s Wellness Week. | Page 3

Tyran Grillo grad reviews the Tempesta di Mare Orchestra performance at Barnes Hall Tuesday. | Page 8

The men’s lacrosse team remained unbeaten, defeating Virginia, 12-9, Saturday. | Page 16

Businesses Allege Ithaca Renting Company Drives Tenants Away Through‘Horrible Leases’ her. When she moved in 2012 from running Culture Shock — the live music Collegetown in recent years has seen venue just off the Ithaca Commons that an increasing number of shuttered stores she rented from Fane — to owning The and restaurants, and in nearly all of these Gates, Flaxman was pleased to find that in the space above The Gates vacant spaces — which was a restaurant with hours include the Green Café and that would not coincide with the former Pita Pit — hang the times her venue would signs for the Ithaca Renting operate. Residents of the Company. According to some apartment building above Collegetown business owners, Culture Shock had filed noise this is no coincidence. complaints against her, which These business owners she said is the primary reason have alleged that by charging she sought out a new location. high rent prices, offering leasFANE But she said she soon es unfavorable to business owners and misleading some potential learned that The Gates shared a wall with tenants, Ithaca Renting and its manager apartments. Two months after opening, Jason Fane have contributed significantly Flaxman found herself embroiled in a lawsuit with Fane over new noise comto the number of empty storefronts. Most recently, in January, commercial plaints. “Fane sued me and tried to evict me,” Collegetown saw the closure of The Gates — an Ithaca Renting property on Flaxman said. “I even asked, when I Eddy Street — whose owner, Marian Flaxman ’08, claims the company misled See ITHACA RENTING page 4 By SARAH CUTLER

Sun Senior Writer

DYLAN CLEMENS / SUN STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Empty eatery | The vacant Green Café on College Avenue is one of several properties that the Ithaca Renting Company owns.

Despite Relocation,LGBT Dance Gannett Officials,Coaches Filthy/Gorgeous Is‘Successful’ Say They Are Skeptical By SAMANTHA DELOUYA

Sun Contributor

Despite being held in a smaller venue, approximately 400 individuals crowded into Willard Straight Hall Saturday for Cornell’s ninth annual Filthy/Gorgeous dance. Known by many for its extravagance, Filthy/Gorgeous — hosted by Haven: Cornell’s LGBTQ Student Union — is the organization's signature event to promote awareness of the LGBT community. However, this year the event underwent a variety of changes, according to Carol James, interim co-director of the LGBT Resource Center In previous years, Filthy/Gorgeous has been hosted in larger venues — such as Noyes Recreational Center and Duffield Hall, The Sun previously reported. However, due to the number of medical transports in past years, Noyes no longer allows the event to be held there, and Duffield is no longer a possibility due to the “exorbitant” rental fee, according to Daniel

Petralia ’15, Filthy/Gorgeous’ head organizer. Although Haven considered larger venues such as

Barton Hall, the organization decided to hold the dance at

See DANCE page 5

Of Athlete Health Study

By ALEXA DAVIS

of health-related issues, including chronic injuries and osteoarthritis, later in life. Both Cornell athletics coaches Susan Geisler, a physical therapist and Gannett officials say they are and supervisor of physical therapy at skeptical of the findings of a study, Gannett Health Services, said she is which concluded that Division I ath- wary of extrapolating the results to letes may face higher physical limita- all current Division I collegiate athtions and chronic injuries by the letes due to the older age of the studtime they reach middle age. ied population. The study, pubShe said it lished in the would be erro“Athletic trainers today neous to make American Journal of Sports Medicine are more informed than generalizations in December, sports we were in the late 70s because examined non-colmedicine care has and early 80’s.” legiate athletes who changed “dramatparticipated in ically” since the Susan Geisler recreational, club or subjects of the intramural sports study competed and Division I athletes between the in college athletics during the 1970s ages of 40 and 65. Researchers and 1980s. required both groups to answer quesMedical knowledge of joint tionnaires about physical function- injuries — especially the knee, ing, sleep, anxiety, fatigue, pain and shoulder and hip — have made depression. sweeping improvements in past few The researchers concluded that decades, according to Geisler. Division I athletes were more than twice as likely to suffer from a variety See ATHLETES page 5

Sun Senior Writer

JOY CHUA / SUN STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Grime and glitter | Last year’s Filthy/Gorgeous took place in Duffield Hall, which held about 900 attendees.


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