Photo Spotlights

  • May 5, 2004

    RIT President Albert Simone (top, center) welcomes a delegation from Tianjin University of Technology in China. The student athletes, considered to be among China's top collegiate martial artists, join RIT's martial arts team for a pair of local presentations. The first show is today at 7 p.m. in NTID's Panara Theatre. An encore performance is scheduled for Saturday at 6 p.m. in the Ritter Ice Arena. Both presentations are open to the public, and admission is $5. Tickets are available at the door.
  • May 4, 2004

    RIT’s School of Hospitality and Service Management hosted its 19th annual Puttin’ on the RITz dinner-dance on April 17 at the RIT Inn & Conference Center. Above, from left, Jennifer Matteson, Janina DeBellis, Jeff Haberbusch and Jillian Patterson prepare the salad, a bed of dandelions and arugula. The gala, attended by 276, was organized entirely by students.
  • May 3, 2004

    In honor of Earth Day, RIT’s Facilities Management recycling department partnered with Delta Phi Epsilon fraternity and environmental sciences professor Karl Korfmacher’s honors class to conduct the second annual RIT Waste Audit. From left, students Taryn Kay, Alicja Bajorska and Kim Roberts weigh and measure trash. Auditors went through 335 lbs of RIT garbage of which they found 27 percent could be recycled—a big improvement over last year’s audit where 50 percent of trash on campus could be recycled but wasn’t.
  • May 1, 2004

    Students enjoy a joust during the kickoff to RIT's Spring Festival 2004, sponsored by the College Activities Board. The weekend celebration got underway on Friday with the Student Government barbecue. Other activities include a carnival and an outdoor movie, but the featured event is a concert by Guster and Matt Nathanson.
  • April 30, 2004

    Soaring temperatures are coaxing many RIT students outdoors for a well deserved study break. On Thursday, the mercury topped 80 degrees in Rochester for the first time this season. The warmer weather offers a welcome diversion from the students' mounting academic demands. Final exams get underway in just over two weeks. RIT's commencement weekend is scheduled for May 21-22.
  • April 29, 2004

    Laura Hatch (center), executive director of the Gravure Education Foundation, shares career insights with print media students during RIT's Gravure Day. Joined here by Gravure Research Professor Robert Chung and Joan Stone, dean of RIT's College of Imaging Arts and Sciences, Hatch was among a half dozen presenters at the first-ever conference. Sponsored by RIT's School of Print Media, the event promoted understanding of the gravure printing and packaging industries and explored research and career opportunities.
  • April 28, 2004

    RIT celebrated the opening of its newest campus addition on April 17—a state-of-the-art artificial-turf field, complete with lights, which will be used by several athletic teams throughout the sports season. Here, members of the men’s soccer team warm up during the dedication ceremony.
  • April 27, 2004

    Scholar John Stauffer, second from right, discussed the power of abolition images at the Douglass Lecture, April 5. A Harvard University professor, Stauffer recently edited a new edition of Frederick Douglass’ My Bondage and My Freedom. Here, he chats with Rich Newman, associate professor of history, right, and two RIT students.
  • April 26, 2004

    Emily Higgins, far right, from Pittsford Middle School, and Caitlin Maeder, far left, from Merton Williams Middle School in Hilton, experiment with Lego kits they programmed with help from RIT student Kira Mikels. The girls explored careers in engineering and used Lego kits to design and build amusement park rides at the "Park & Ride" workshop, April 15-17.
  • April 23, 2004

    Flames emerge as iron is melted in a special furnace for the "Big Pour" event on April 16, sponsored by the School of Art. During the day-long event, liquid iron was melted at a temperature of over 3,000 degrees Fahrenheit, then poured red-hot over specially designed sculpture molds. Students will then touch-up their creations before putting them on display.
  • April 22, 2004

    Almost 1,700 RIT students voted in Student Government elections held April 12-15. And while "Arhnold" received a couple of votes, next year's president will be Sheila Sarratore, with vice president David Blonski. Here, a student votes on laptop computers set up in the Student Alumni Union.
  • April 21, 2004

    Sparks fly as the Steel Bridge team finishes up construction. The team travels to SUNY Buffalo on April 24 for regional competition. RIT hopes to best competitors using an innovative new cable-stay type design.