In my DeWitt Junior High School days (cc '66-'70) the Moosewood was a padded, sub-grade, cell where we held gym class (I only ate at the restaurant once and that may've been outside at the sidewalk cafe...). I remember doing calisthenics, wrestling (maybe dodgeball too), and, briefly, an after-school exercise program that included a medicine ball in an attempt to control an early-teen weight problem (now what Ian or Down-Under Dave called a modest-sized "veranda"). The gym room occupied the southwest corner of the basement--the next room west was the start of the woodshop, a long room, and I think it went all the way to the entry stair off of Seneca Street (I think this too is part of Moosewood now but I'm not sure where the clothing store space begins/began) though there may've been a room between the woodshop and the stair (the teacher's lounge?). The "non-woodshop shop" (housing a foundry, welding, metal lathes, sheet metal shop, and electrical classroom) was located in a long room on the Cayuga Street side just north of where the Guitar Workshop is located in the southwest corner of the basement. P.S. I did my dishwashing at Camp Barton, the Boy Scout camp north of Taughannock Falls State Park on Cayuga Lake, though a woman on my paper route, Galetti Chacona (Greek, I think, or maybe Italian), with connections in the restaurant business offered to get me a dishwashing job if I wanted it... -----Original Message----- From: Cuyler Page [mailto:[log in to unmask]] Sent: Tuesday, August 24, 1999 3:08 AM To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Re: Ithaca. home of cleanliness and retention >In a message dated 8/22/99 10:51:21 PM Eastern Daylight Time, >[log in to unmask] writes: > >> I washed dishes at IC 30 years ago. > >Me to. > >][<en Ah, Ithaca, home of dishwashing and other retentive atitudes : I too washed dishes, at Cornell's Home Ec. Caf., 42 years ago. I've never forgotten the lesson in how to properly wash by an amazing Estonian bakeress who was a demonic but practical teacher of the art of cleanliness and rewarded success with the most wonderful cinnamon buns in the world. She also taught that a good dishwasher will never be out of work. Cuyler PS: Does anyone remember when the Moosewood space was our high school Sheet Metal Shop ? They ocassionally still serve sheet there, perhaps in memory of earlier times.