t h e
Herald
By and for the students of Hobart and William Smith Colleges ISSUE 17
VOLUME CXXVIII
MARCH 25, 2005
What You Should Have Done For Spring Break, You Crazy Drunks Patricia J. Foster, Katie Bell Writers / Reporters
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ammering down shots, beers, and cocktails, hun dreds of hungry students head to the tropics for spring break, escaping tests, papers, presentations, and professors. Meanwhile, across the island other students hammer nails into fresh plywood. Their vacation of choice: community service. The amount of college students participating in community service is steadily rising. The Campus Compact Organization, a national public service group found on college campuses, estimated that 30,000 students chose community service over colada’s and coolers on the coast. Alicia Pagan, senior at Hobart and William Smith Colleges, partakes in the Alternative Spring Break (ASB) programs offered. The psychology major traveled to Greene County, Pennsylvania in March of 2002, and next week she heads to Warrington County, North Carolina. Pagan, a highly ranked student leader in the Public Service Office of Hobart and William Smith Colleges, says community service plays an important role in her life. Pagan organized the Habitat for Humanity Alternative Spring Break trip that traveled to Greene County three years ago. The five person crew spent four days working on a two family home. They wired the house, dry-walled, and applied siding. “In such a small amount of time we made such a difference. In four days we helped a family be weeks closer to moving in,” she stated. The houses are not alone in need of development. Greene County “was tiny,” Pagan described. Struggling to note the
Graph courtesy of http://www.habitat.org
break giving back to a different community,” she stated. Embarking on her second trip, Alicia packs her bags with enthusiasm. For this experience she will trade her saw and pliers for chalk and textbooks. Hobart and William Smith Colleges offer two ASB programs: one to Pocahontas State Park, Virginia and the other to the poverty stricken county in North Carolina, where a group of 11 students will aid teachers for one week. Hobart alumni, Michael Harris, class of 2000, created the “Noralina” program four years ago. Assigned to Warrington County, he also participated in the Teach for America program. In addition to working with elementary and middle school students in Warrington County, the program also lends a hand at the local
church’s after school program. They also take part in other service projects; last year the Hobart and William Smith Colleges students held a workshop, providing Warrington County students with information regarding college. Contrasting with the classroom based “Norolina” trip, students assist park rangers in the cleaning and upkeep of the Pocahontas State Park. Instead of teaching indoors, students learn outdoors. Ave Bauder, Director of the Office of Public Service, who attends one trip annually, believed the Virginia State Parks are some of the lowest funded parks, yet also some of the highest visited parks. “Volunteers are imperative to their survival,” he said. Since 1999, with the students’ help, the Park advances six weeks in their daily duties. Being ahead of schedule gives the rangers oppor-
Unsubstantial Cardio Equipment
W e e k e n d
area’s landmarks, she listed: McDonalds, a few churches, a store, and a movie theater that played the same movie at seven p.m. three nights a week. After learning of this Pennsylvania lifestyle, Pagan developed heightened passion for serving other communities, leading her to sign up for the upcoming ASB trip. “I wanted to spend my last spring
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W e a t h e r
Geneva, NY
Patricia J. Foster Copy Editor
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obart and William Smith Colleges has highly com petitive, successful athletic teams. With Division I athletes and Division III champions, weightlifting and cardiovascular training is imperative for a team’s success. Because of the tradition of excellence all sports teams have, students wonder why the fitness center in the Bristol Field house lacks proper equipment. The fitness center holds one weight rack, with one set of every dumbbell weight ranging from 5 pounds to 95 pounds. It also has five benches, three situated for the bench press, 15 weight machines, six elliptical machines, four in relatively good condition, two old stairmasters, eight bicycles, three of which were made in 1989, and three treadmills. With 1900 students, the room lacks a suitable amount of free weights and machines, creating a busy exercise room. The morning is busy as the Geneva Hospital uses the facility for their rehabilitation program. Elders
tunity to do additional work that otherwise would not be completed, improving the quality and community. Rangers show the students appreciation for the students’ manual labor and great efforts with hay rides, canoe trips, and a tour of the historically rich city nearby. Trips to Richmond include visiting Civil War museums, the Edgar Allen Poe museum, and a meal overlooking the James River. Nightly reflections are also configured into the program’s schedule. Groups reflect on their actions— how they are impacting the world on a larger scale. They “reflect on how to make a difference,” Bauder concluded. Hobart and William Smith Colleges is not the only school offering tropical alternatives. Colorado State University sends approximately 100 students to various sites across the United States, from California to Washington DC. The trips focus on social and cultural issues such as hunger, AIDS/HIV, homelessness, racial dilemmas, and the environment, Colorado State University’s Community Service Office wrote. Like many other service programs, their mission is to improve students’ analytical skills, realizing problems and seeking solutions and to continually contribute to their community. The University of Vermont has sent over 1,000 volunteers through their ASB program since it kicked off in 1991, completing over 45,000 hours of service, the University of Vermont’s Community Service Office estimated. In 2005 the school will launch eight ASB programs for
Neverland Ranch, CA
Friday:
Friday:
Showers, 41°/26°
Mostly Sunny, 62°/47°
Saturday:
Saturday:
Rain/Snow Showers, 38°/32°
Partly Cloudy, 66°/50°
Sunday:
Sunday:
Showers, 40°/31°
Partly Cloudy, 67°/54°
Graduation Day
William Smith students excercise in current workout facilities.
use the free weights, benches, weight machines, and treadmills while nurses monitor their heart rates. Between the hours of eight a.m. and 11 a.m., the fitness center is busy with elders, leaving little room for a student to work out. Beginning at three p.m. this workout room fills up with students. Athletes and non-athletes fight for machines, cutting people in line in order to get a quick set done. There is always a 15 minute wait for the cardiovascular machines, and the weight section is constantly
crowded. “I have to race to get there from class so that I can get a machine. If it’s after 4:30 p.m., forget about it. I have to run outside or use the track. But there are tons of athletes running on the track for practice,” Lauren Fuller, an HWS junior said. She declared, “It’s really annoying having someone stand behind me waiting for me to get off. It’s even more annoying when I am the one waiting for a machine. I can’t even lift while I wait because it’s so cramped.”
Iranian policewomen (right) assult a building during a graduation ceremony in Tehran on March 12. Sixty-five female graduates will be assigned to crimes committed by women.
Photo by Farzaneh Khademian / ABACA Courtesy of MSN Online
Spring Fling Returns to HWS
March Madness
Gym Class Heroes
Find all the details about the popular event as it makes its return this year.
Pick your favorites for the Elite 8.
Local Hip-Hop group takes it national with the February release of The Papercut Chronicles.
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