Members of RIT's School of Art prepare for the climax to The Big Pour, a six-day workshop in sculpture casting held March 20-25. Students worked with a professional sculpture to construct the furnace and other tools needed for lead casting. Sculptures were also created from aluminum, bronze, glass -- even chocolate. Participants poured more than 140 individual casts using the various materials. Organizers of The Big Pour say this type of event has never happened anywhere else in the world.
March 27, 2001
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Seventeen sophomore and junior high school girls from seven Rochester-area schools spent March 23 at RIT for "Shadow Day." After sleeping over in an RIT dormitory the previous night, the girls participated in a full day of hands-on engineering activities with RIT students, giving them an early taste of both college life and potential engineering studies. "Shadow Day" was sponsored by RIT's student chapter of the Society of Women Engineers.
March 26, 2001
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A student pours molten aluminum into a mold during the Big Pour. The Big Pour, sponsored by the School of Art and the School of American Crafts, featured pours of glass, bronze, iron and chocolate during the week of March 20-25.
March 22, 2001
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Jamey Dungan of the North East Neighborhood Alliance (NENA) putts about in front of the Open Door Mission booth manned by Christopher Scribani (right) at the RIT Community Service Fair on March 22.
March 21, 2001
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Clifford Janey, RIT's Minette Professor, talks to students and facutly at his welcome reception, March 20. Janey, who is also the superintendent of the Rochester city school district, is teaching a spring quarter leadership class.
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