Skip to main content

05 11 16 entire issue hi res

Page 1


The Corne¬ Daily Sun

Day Hall Updates Faculty on Business College

C.U. Names CUHA Director

Prof Meg Thompson, clinical sciences, has been named the director of the Cornell University Hospital for Animals a teaching hospital within the College of Veterinary Medicine according to a University press release

CVM Dean Prof Lorin Warnick, population medicine and diagnostic sciences, announced Thompson’s appointment today and her term begins immediately, the release said

Thompson has served as interim director since Aug 2015 and director of continuing education since 2012, and provided input on decisions regarding the veterinary college’s technology infrastructure and future expansion, according to the University

As interim director, Thompson aided in

assessing the hospital’s facilities and staffing needs, Warnick said in the release, praising Warnick’s ability to evaluate operations and collaborate with veterinarians

“Her administrative experience, understanding of hospital operations and extensive work with regional veterinarians put her in an excellent position to take on the director role,” Warnick said

Thompson who has a bachelor’s degree in architecture and master ’ s degree in counseling psychology emphasized that her diverse background will serve her well in her new role

“My undergraduate training is helpful when considering facility needs,” she said in the release “My masters inspired my interest in human resources, staffing and management And my background in radiology helps me evaluate our technology needs ”

C o l l e g e o f

Bu s i n e s s i n Ma l o t t Ha l l Tu e s d a y

Provo s t Mi c h a e l Ko t l i k o f f i n t ro d u c e d

c o m m i t t e e s s t e e r i n g , f a c u l t y g ove r -

n a n c e , s t a f f s y n e r g y, a l u m n i e n g a g e m e n t ,

g r a d u a t e s t u d e n t s y n e r g y, u n d e r g r a d u a t e s t u d e n t s y n e r g y a n d c o m m u n i c a t i o n s e s t a b l i s h e d i n Ja n u a r y t o “ p rov i d e b ro a d i n p u t i n t o [ t h e c o l l e g e ’ s ] s t r u c t u re a n d p o l i c y ” T h e C o l l e g e o f Bu s i n e s s w a s a p p rove d by t h e B o a rd o f Tr u s t e e s i n Ja n u a r y a n d w i l l b e g i n o p e r a t i o n s i n t h e f a l l , T h e Su n p re v i o u s l y re p o r t e d T h e p r i o r i t i e s o f t h e f a c u l

C.U. Republicans

n c

n t i n u i n g t h e s c h o o l s ’ s e p a r a t e m i s s i

M a n y m e m b e r s o f

C o r n e l l R e p u b l i c a n s h a v e

s a i d t h e y p l a n t o r a l l y

b e h i n d ‘ p re s u m p t i ve ’ p re s i -

d e n t i a l n o m i n e e D o n a l d

Tr u m p, c i t i n g t h e u r g e n c y o f

b a r r i n g f o r m e r Se c re t a r y o f

St a t e Hi l l a r y C l i n t o n f ro m

t h e W h i t e Ho u s e Ol i v i a C o r n ’ 1 9 , c h a i r o f

C o r n e l l R e p u b l i c a n s , s a i d

t h a t w h i l e s h e d o e s n o t a g re e

w i t h a l l o f Tr u m p ’ s s t a n c e s , s h e p l a n s t o vo t e f o r h i m a s t h e l e s s e r o f t w o e v i l s , s t re s si n g t h e d a m a g e t h a t w o u l d r e s u l t i f C l i n t o n w e r e t o a s s u m e t h e p re s i d e n c y “ I c a n n o t s p e a k f o r e ve r y i n d i v i d u a l i n t h e o r g a n i z at i o n , b u t f o r m e a t t h i s p o i n t , I w i l l b e vo t i n g f o r Do n a l d Tr u m p, ” C o r n s a i d “ W h i l e h e i s a f l a we d c a n d id a t e , h i s va l u e s m o re c l o s e l y a l i g n w i t h m i n e t h a n Hi l l a r y

C l i n t o n ' s Vo t i n g t h i rd p a r t y i s n o t a n o p t i o n f o r m e b e c a u s e a v o t e f o r G a r y Jo h n s o n i s a vo t e f o r Hi l l a r y

THE CORNELL DAILY SUN GUIDE TO SLOPE DAY 2016

Happy Slope Day Eve!

C l i n t o n , a n d t h i s e l e c t i o n i s t o o i m p o r t a n t f o r t h a t t o h a p p e n ” Da v i d Na va d e h ’ 1 9 , s e co n d v i c e c h a i r o f C o r n e l l R e p u b l i c a n s , a g r e e d w i t h C o r n , s a y i n g t h a t a l t h o u g h Tr u m p i s n o t h i s i d e a l n o mi n e e , b o t h p a r t i e s m u s t b a n d t o g e t h e r t o b l o c k C l i n t o n “ M a n y R e p u b

Navadeh said “However, the worst case scenario is Hillar y Clinton becoming President, with Republicans and many Democrats alike wanting to make sure that never happens

The Sun is here to give you all the details you need to know before hitting the Slope tomorrow

Wristbands

Attendees are required to pick up Slope Day wristbands before the event If you have not already obtained your wristband, you can pick one up today with a Cornell or government-issued ID at various locations across campus

Music

Shut up and dance to pop-rock quartet Walk the Moon and New Jersey EDM duo Cash Cash on Slope Day

Weather

Get ready to enjoy partly cloudy skies with a high of 73º and a low of 55º

“Although Tr ump has said some things I disagree with, s o

Corn said “Hillar y Clinton lies through her teeth, puts down women and would be a horrible representation of this countr y I am unable to vote for the third and four th terms of Obama, which is why I feel I have no choice but to back my establishment candidate ”

triumphant | Donald Trump waves to the crowd during a campaign rally in Charleston on Thursday

Today Wednesday, May 11, 2016

weather FORECAST

Obser vational Insight Into Tornado Processes Using Phased-Array and Dual-Polarization

Mobile Doppler Radars

3:30 - 4:30 p m , 2146 Snee Hall

Veterinar y Senior Seminars

4:30 - 5:45 p m , Lecture Hall 3, College of Veterinar y Medicine

Sara Milstein, Making a Case: The Repurposing Of ‘Israelite Legal Fictions’ in Deuteronomic Law

4:30 - 6 p m , 110 White Hall

Korean Language Program Showcase

Global Learning Toolkit: Making Sense of Cultural Encounters

12 - 2 p m , 225 ILR Conference Center

Vienvilay Phandanouvong Lozano Microbiology Research Seminar

4 p m , 105 Riley-Robb Hall

Impact of U V on Characterizing Pale Blue Dots Around Other Stars

4 - 5 p m , 105 Space Sciences Building

Cornell Biotech Club Seminar: Alexion Pharmaceuticals 5 p m , 146 Morrison Hall

Alaska Moose Harmonizes With Home’s Wind Chimes

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) Forget “Uptown

Funk ” The Alaska wild is grooving to the smooth “moose-ic” of wind chimes

Britta Schroeder shot video of a moose playing onepart harmony with the wind chimes on the porch of her rural cabin near Denali National Park and Preser ve, and it’s quickly making its way across the Internet

Schroeder heard the chimes around 10:30 p m May

4 She looked out the window of her home near Healy, Alaska, about 10 miles north of the park’s entrance, but it didn’t look windy

The chimes continued to sound for two to three more minutes Then she heard a thump on her porch

“My dogs’ ears perked up, ” she said “I knew it was going to be an animal ”

Sure enough, there was a moose, rubbing its head against the wind chimes and gumming the glass disc pendulum that hangs down from the middle of the instrument She opened the door of her cabin wide enough to get her cellphone through to shoot video but still keep her dog inside

Schroeder said a cow and two moose calves had spent some time near her cabin since last summer but she had not seen the family since March She assumes the mother has kicked the calves out, and this one returned to her

7:30 - 8:45 p m , 132 HEC Goldwin Smith Hall neetpmU ydeeps snoisivelet desurep owt ,peehs neht neetpmu stekcit dewot ,retipuJ dna naD selgnatnu evif -sergorp evis secifiro neetpmU citoxiuq skravdraa ylgniyonna thguob owt sehsotnicaM neetpmU xuaerub delkcit owt ylemertxe dirtup smsilutob luaP decifircas eno ,dnatspmal neht retipuJ seirram eht yrev citoxiuq rekorbnwap eviF elprup snosiop ,dehgual tey neetpmu smumehtnasyrhc sessik evif skravdraa namtaB ylision selgnatnu eno ykcowrebbaJ owT sehsotnicaM ,dehgual neht eno ylemertxe cinerhpozihcs ykcowrebbaJ ylneknurd selgnatnu owt ,peehs revewoh krauQ denohpelet neetpmu esebo seikcowrebbaJ eviF elbicsari smsilutob ylthgils ylemal denoitcua ffo eht ,yawbus dna evif smumehtnasyrhc ylisae selgnatnu eno yltsom ydeeps nognilK eviF sgod ylneknurd desurep

yard As for the “moose-ical” interlude, Schroeder isn’t going to venture a guess as to what attracted the moose to the wind chimes

Fifty Years After Riot, Publisher Asks Rolling Stones to Return

LYNN, Mass (AP) A newspaper publisher is asking the Rolling Stones to return to town 50 years after they cut short a show during a thunderstorm, leading fans to rampage

Ted Grant, publisher of the Daily Item in Lynn, said in an open letter published Tuesday that “ a lot has changed” since the band was last in town, on June 24, 1966, and he wants the British rockers to finish the set that ended when they left the stage during a storm at the Manning Bowl stadium Angr y fans broke through barriers, prompting police to use tear gas, and the Stones pledged never to return to the city, 10 miles north of Boston

“ We ain’t too proud to beg,” the Item’s chief executive, Beth Bresnahan, said Tuesday

The newspaper has reached out to Stones management tr ying to secure an inter view with one or more members of the band for a stor y it plans to mark the 50th anniversar y of the show but hasn’t heard back and will continue to tr y, said Bresnahan, a Lynn native

Student Creates Display Honoring Groundbreaking Geneticist, Alumna

Juliet Jacobson ’16 has created an exhibit in Mann Library honoring Barbara McClintock ’23, M A ’25, Ph D ’27 a Nobel Prize-winning biologist who discovered transposable elements, or sequences of DNA that can migrate throughout the genome, according to the University The exhibit, funded by a grant from the President’s Council of Cornell Women, displays books about and quotes from McClintock Jacobson told the University that she was motivated to create the display when she arrived at Cornell expecting to see a major monument commemorating McClintock but only found a remote plaque

Around The Ivies

Female Harvard Students, Alumnae Urge College To ‘Hear Her, Harvard’

Hundreds of Harvard women rallied in front of the college’s administrative building Tuesday, protesting a new policy preventing members of unrecognized single-gender social organizations from holding leadership positions in clubs and receiving fellowships, according to the Harvard Crimson

These unrecognized organiz

sororities and final clubs exclusive and often single-gen-

tions and the policy aims to reduce sexual assault and exclusion on campus, the Crimson reported

Local

Local Police

Find Meth-Making Materials In Groton Apartment

University Begins Slope Day Breakfast Initiative

Plans to emphasize students’ self care, modify TCAT routes

C.U. Health Experts to Conduct Zika Study for WHO University

Parole officers visited the home of a parolee on Friday and discovered materials used in the manufacturing of methamphetamine, The Ithaca Voice reported They informed the Groton Police of the discovery in the parolee’s, Brian K Mahan, 43, apartment Friday morning Tompkins County Sheriff ’ s Office and New York State Police Contaminated Crime Scene Evidence Response Team were then notified and requested at the scene profited from the bribery, extortion and moneylaundering schemes

The investigation is seeking to determine whether Percoco deceitfully closed the money received from entities doing business with the state, The Journal reported

by

Ma t t h e w In d i m i n e ’ 1 8 , i n c o m i n g e xe cu t i ve v i c e p re s i d e n

B o

“Be smart and safe. Don’t try to sneak things in — they’re smarter than you think. ”

Matthew Indimine

p e Da y, ”

n g i d i a n d Pe t r u c c i s a i d “ T h e d i s t r i b u t i o n o f b re a k f a s t i s g o o d i n t h a t i t w i

n

g y f

y ” A

m i n u t e t i p, In d i m i n

s a i d : “ Be s m a r t a n d s a f e Do n ’ t t r y t o s n e a k t h i n g s i n t h e y ' re s m a r t e r t h a n yo u t h i n k ! ” Ga n g i d i a n d Pe t r u c c i a d v i s e d s t u d e n t s t o re m e m b e r t o a p p l y s u n t a n l o t i o n re g u l a r l y, t o k e e p h yd r a t e d a n d t o e a t t h ro u g h o u t

t h e d a y T h e d a y - t o - d a y o p e r a t i o n s o f t h e TC AT b u s ro u t e s w i l l a l s o

b e m o d i f i e d i n p re p a r a t i o n f o r Sl o p e Da y, a c c o rd i n g t o a

To m p k i n s C o u n t y p re s s re l e a s e

Gi ve n t h a t t h e c o n c e r t c l o s e s o f f a c c e s s t o s e ve

Work to formulate guidelines on best ways to feed infants during outbreak

g , a c c o r d i n g t o a Un i v e r s i t y p r e s s r e l e a s e T h e Wo r l d He a l t h O r g a n i z a t i o n w i l l u s e t h e t e a m ’ s r e s e a r c h t o i n f o r m i t s g u i d e l i n e s f o r f e e d i n g i n f a n t s d u r i n g a Zi k a o u t b r e a k , t h e Un i v e r s i t y s a i d T h i s a n n o u n c e m e n t c a m e s h o r t l y a f t e r t h e p r o f e s s o r s , w i t h Su s a n n a h C o l t g r a d a n d o t h e r W H O r e s e a r c h e r s , r e l e a s e d a s t u d y o n Ma y 2 t h a t w a s u n a b l e t o d e t e r m i n e i f b r e a s tf e e d i n g a l o n e c a n t r a n s m i t t h e v i r u s , t h e Un i v e r s i t y r e p o r t e d T h e s t u d y c o n c l u d e d t h a t “ m o r e e v i d e n c e i s n e e d e d t o d i s t i n g u i s h b r e a s t f e e d i n g t r a n sm i s s i o n f r o m o t h e r t r a n s m i s s i o n r o u t e s [ a r o u n d t h e t i m e o f b i r t h ] , ” s u c h a s l a b o r a n d p r e g n a n c y Re s e a r c h e r s h a v e n e v e r t h e l e s s e s t a b l i s h e d t h a t Zi k a a m o s q u i t o - b o r n e i n f e c t i o n i s “ a s s o c i a t e d w i t h a n i n c r e a s e i n c e n t r a l n e rv o u s s y s t e m m a l f o r m a t i o n s a n d n e w b o r n m i c r o c e p h a l y c a s e s , ” t h e s t u d y s a i d

“We anticipate that people are going to start actively looking at Zika virus infection and breastfeeding transmission as better diagnostics become available and as knowledge about it is increasing around the world ”

Prof Saurabh Mehtna

t Me h t a

d o p t i

h a t r e s e a r c h o n t h e t o p i c w i l l g r ow “ We a n t i c i p a t e t h a t p e o p l e a r e g o i n g t o s t a r t a c t i v e l y l o o k i n g a t Zi k a v i r u s i n f e c t i o n a n d b r e a s t f e e d i n g t r a n s m i s s i o n a s b e t t e r d i a g n o s t i c s b e c o m e a v a i l a b l e a n d a s k n ow le d g e a b o u t i t i s i n c r e a s i n g a r o u n d t h e w o r l d , ” Me h t a s a

Mi c r o c e p h a l y l e a d s t o a b n o r m a l l y s m a l l h e a d s i n i n f a n t s a n d h a s a l s o b e e n l i n k e d t o i n t e l l e c t u a l d i s a b i l i t i e s , s e i z u r e s a n d d e v e l o pm e n t a l d e l a y, a c c o rd i n g t o t h e C e n t e r f o r Di s e a s e C o n t r o l a n d Pr e v e n t i o n O n e c o m p l i c a t i o n w i t h d i a g n o s i n g Zi k aa s s o c i a t e d m i c r o c e p h a l y i s t h a t Zi k a i s f r eq u e n t l y a s y m p t o m a t i c i n m o t h e r s , Fi n k e l s t e i n s a i d i n t h e r e l e a s e “ S i n c e t h e m o t h e r m o s t o f t e n d o e s n ’ t s h ow a n y s y m p t o m s , t h e p o t e n t i a l n u m b e r s f o r h ow m a n y m o t h e r s a r e r e a l l y i n f e c t e d c o u l d b e m u c h g r e a t e r, ” s h e s a i d Fi n k e l s t e i n e s t i m a t e d t h a t w h i l e o n l y o n e i n 1 0 0 c a s e s o f a m o t h e r c a r r y i n g Zi k a r e s u l t s i n i n f a n t m i c r o c e p h a l y, o n e i n f i v e c a s e s m a y c a u s e o t h e r c o m p l i c a t i o n s s u c h a s c o n g e ni t a l a b n o r m a l i t i e s a n d b r a i n m a l f o r m a t i o n s a c c o rd i n g t o t h e Un i v e r s i t y In t h e r e l e a s e , b o t h r e s e a r c h e r s s t r e s s e d t h a t t h e l i t e r a t u r e l i n k i n g b r e a s t f e e d i n g a n d Zi k a t r a n s m i s s i o n i s s t i l l i n i t s b e g i n n i n g s t a

Admins Seek to Distinguish CCB From P e e r s

Discuss faculty, staff, student role in integrating colleges, maintaining schools’ individual identities

COLLEGE

Continued from page 1

three schools [Dyson, Johnson and Hotel], yet we can coordinate more effectively if we formalize the links among our faculty in ways that we don’t presently ”

The faculty in the three schools are currently identifying their preferred area of affiliation Seven possible areas include accounting, applied economics and policy, finance, management and organizations, marketing and communication, operations, and technology and information, according to Barrett

do annual reviews, how we do reappointment and promotion and tenure reviews,” Barrett said

Prof Rohit Verma, hotel administration and dean designate of external relations for the college, said students’ concerns and recommendations have been organized into three broad categories: curriculum and academic affairs, student and career services and student governance

“There is a strong desire for students to maintain the current cohort,” Verma said, noting that students want to make sure class sizes and specific curriculum focuses stay the same

“The [faculty guidance committee] developed extremely detailed protocols around how we hire, how we do annual reviews, how we do reappointment and promotion and tenure reviews.”

“As of 7 a m [ Tuesday morning], 153 faculty had already declared their preferred alignment We expect to have all of those area affiliations pinned down later this month and begin to identify area coordinators, whose responsibilities will be to help coordinate curriculum, to coordinate scholarly life across their areas, ” Barrett said Barrett said the college’s design is “multidisciplinary,” which will “differentiate it from other elite colleges of business across the country and throughout the world ”

Other considerations, based on student suggestions, include increased course coordination among the three schools and the potential availability of new minors, majors and dual degrees, according to Verma

While students hope each school to retains its own identity including governance, clubs and organizations Verma said they also want “ a voice in the uniting of the college ”

Dutta said he expects a two-year interim Hotel School dean to be announced in the next four weeks, a full-term Johnson School dean to be selected in the next two months and the search for a full-term Dyson School dean to begin later this month

Joel Malina, vice president for University Relations, said the communications committee has been informing “internal and external audiences” about the college and its future potential

“We’ve been working with Undergraduate Admissions to make sure that sufficient information for prospective students on the College of Business is incorporated into various websites,” Malina said “We’ve also been maintaining the [CCB] website, which will transition over the coming months as we move toward the launch of the College ”

As many prospective students consider enrolling at Cornell, Dutta said admissions is working to make sure it is preparing “ an exciting vision of what the College of Business represents ”

“This is a continuous process and we will aspire to communicate as best as we can, ” Dutta said “Our comparison should be some of the best business colleges in the world, and we should ask the question how can we in fact be even better than that?”

“ The [faculty governance] committee developed extremely detailed protocols around how we hire, how we

C.U. Republicans

S e e k t o K e e p C l i n t o n F r o m P r e s i d e n c y

REPUBLICANS

Navadeh said that although he prefers Sen Ted Cruz (R-Texas) or Sen Marco Rubio (R-Fla ) to Trump, if either ran a third party campaign, it would guarantee a Clinton presidency

“A third party victory from Cruz or Rubio would be ideal, but we know this would just split the Republican vote and hand the election to Clinton” Navadeh said

As many Cornell Republicans members voted for Cruz in the New York primary, they may choose to vote for a third party libertarian candidate instead of Trump, according to Irvin McCullough, first vice chair of Cornell Republicans

“While I've supported Donald Trump for some time, almost all of the Cornell Republicans supported Ted Cruz in the primar y fight,” McCullough said “ That makes sense given our slightly libertarian bent I wouldn't be surprised if some of our members, regardless of Mr Tr ump ' s attempts to unify the party, voted libertarian in November I have yet to see many members cross party lines to vote for Hillary Clinton ”

Corn also said Republicans must consider the stakes in this election, stressing that she would not feel comfor table with Clinton choosing members of the Supreme Court

“The next president will have the ability to control possibly three nominees to the

“[The college] will have to find some mechanism to incorporate student governance into each of the individual schools and into the college as well,” Verma said Dean of the Johnson Graduate School of Management and incoming dean of the College of Business Soumitra

Cruzin’ into Congress

College operations are expected to launch on July 1, according to Kotlikoff

Ariel Seidner can be reached at aseidner@cornellsun com

Supreme Court, and I do not feel comforteable letting Hillary Clinton decide who those people are, ” Corn said

Corn added that the country “needs to recover from the wreckage left by [Obama’s] presidency” and said Clinton would continue many of his administrative policies

“The Iran Deal needs fixing, Obamacare needs to be gutted and rebuilt, the national debt needs to stop growing at alarming rates and these are things Hillary Clinton will not fix,” Corn said

sue radical polcies

“I firmly believe that Mr Trump, if elect-

should not make their decision about who to vote for prematurally, according to McCullough

“The next president will have the ability to control possibly three nominees to the Supreme Court, and I do not feel comfortable letting Hillary Clinton decide who those people are.”

Olivia Corn ’19

McCullough urged Republicans to “unite behind Donald Trump,” expressing a belief that the businessman would not pur-

ed, will be one of the most moderate presidents in recent history,” he said

The “political landscape” will look very different in November, so Republicans

“Whether it's Donald Trump coming to the center, Hillary Clinton facing an indictment or Ted Cruz appearing as a SCOTUS nominee, it's a bit too early for ever y Republican to have made up their mind about Donald Trump,” he said

McCullough advised other Republicans is to “have an open mind, not a closed heart ”

Madeline Cohen can be reached at mcohen@cornellsun com

Sanders Wins West Virginia, Facing Slim Nomination Chances

LOUISVILLE, Ky (AP)

W h i t e Ho u s e d r e a m s f a d i n g ,

S e n B e r n i e S a n d e r s ( D - V t )

added another state to his tally against Hillar y Clinton with a win in West Virginia on Tuesday a victor y that will do little to

s l o w t h e f o r m e r s e c r e t a r y o f state ’ s steady march toward the Democratic presiential nomination

Me a n w h i l e , R e p u b l i c a n

Donald Tr ump also won there and in Nebraska, a week after he cleared the field of his remaining rivals They were not victories

l i k e l y t o h e a l t h e p a r

y ' s wounds, as some GOP leaders continue to hold off offering their endorsement of the par ty ’ s presumptive nominee

T h e r e s u l t

n

h e We s t V i r g i n i a D e m o c r a t i c p r i m a r y underscored the awkward posi-

t i o n C l i n

y attempt to turn their focus to the general election Sanders has won 19 states to Clinton’s 23, but she is 94 percent of the way to winning the nomination just 144 delegates shor t of the 2,383 required

That means she could lose all the states left to vote by a lands l i d e a n d s t i l l e m e r g e a s t h e nominee, so long as all her suppor ters among the par ty insiders known as superdelegates continue to back her Clinton needs to win just 14 p e r c e n t o f t h e d e

s a n d uncommitted superdelegates at stake in the remaining contests,

and she remains on track to cap-

June

Still, Sanders is vowing to f i g h

He

Tuesday and his victor y in West

Clinton’s str uggles to win over white men and independents

w

exploit in the fall campaign

“Let me be as clear as I can be, we are in the campaign to w i n t h e De

tion," Sanders said at a campaign event in Salem, Oregon

"We are going to fight for ever y last vote

Warrant: Minnesota Doctor Prescribed Prince Drugs

still

campaign has grown harder as Clinton closes in on the nomination His fundraising has fallen off and so, too, has his adver-

$525,000 in ads planned for California and $63,000 each in

according to adver tising tracker Kantar Media’s CMAG

GOP Presses Facebook Over Display of Conservative Stories

WA S H I N G TO N ( A P )

Senate Republicans on Tuesday demanded an explanation from Facebook after reports that former company staffers excluded

l i n k s t o c o n s e r va t i ve p o l i t i c a l stories

A senior Facebook executive said the company has found no evidence to back up the anonymous allegations

In a letter to chairman and c h i e f e x e c u t i v e M a r k Zuckerberg, South Dakota Sen John Thune requested information on who at the company made the decisions on stories for Facebook’s Trending Topics feature, what training is provided to employees, whether the company is investigating and what steps

i t w i l l t a k e t o h o l d p e o p l e accountable

“ I f Fa c e b o o k p r e s e n t s i t s

Tre n d i n g To p i c s s e c t i o n

a result of a neutral, objective algorithm, but it is in fact subjective and filtered to support or suppress par ticular political viewpoints, Facebook’s assertion that it maintains ‘ a platform for people and perspectives from across the political spectrum ’ misleads the public,” wrote Thune, who c h a i r s t h e Se n

Tr

C

Committee

He asked for answers by May 24

News repor ts say Facebook employees excluded links to stories they considered less reliable in its list of trending stories, though individuals could post links to conser vative stories on their own Facebook feeds

Tom Stocky, Facebook vice president of search, said his team is responsible for the Trending To p

lines in place for the review team to ensure consistency and neu-

suppression of political perspectives Nor do they permit the prioritization of one viewpoint over another or one news outlet over another These guidelines do not prohibit any news outlet f r o m a p p

i n g i n Tr e n d i n g Topics ” Adam Jentleson, an aide to Senate Minority Leader Harr y R e i d , ( D - Ne v ) , m a i n t a i n e d there are more pressing priorities than the Facebook issue

n (Supreme Court nominee) Judge ( Me r r i c k ) Ga r l a n d

s t o fund the president’s request for Zika aid and takes the most days off of any Senate since 1956, but thinks Facebook hearings are a matter of urgent national interest, ” Jentleson said “ The taxpayers who pay Republican senators ’ s a l a r i e s p

r money back ” Questioned later in the day about his inquir y, Thune defended the committee's actions and i n s i s t e d h e w a s n ' t s u g g e s t i n g “anything untoward” on the part of Facebook He said the panel was responding to media reports and asking for a clarification on policy

CHANHASSEN, Minn (AP) A Minnesota doctor saw Prince twice in the month before his death, including the day before he died, and prescribed him medication, according to contents of a search warrant that were revealed Tuesday even as authorities revisited the musician’s estate

Dr Mi c h a e l To d d S c h u lenberg treated Prince on April 7 and April 20, and he prescribed “medications and prescriptions” for the musician, according to the warrant, which was filed Thursday in Hennepin County and obtained by at least two news outlets before authorities moved to ensure it was sealed

In ve s t i g

he worked

The warrant did not specify what medications were prescribed for Prince or whether he took them

The search warrant naming Schulenberg seeks “any and all medical records ... for Prince Rogers Nelson

d searched a suburban Minneapolis hospital where

Contents of the warrant were re ve a l e d t h e s

t

a t authorities returned to Prince’s Paisley Park home and studio in suburban Minneapolis where he was found dead April 21 A sheriff ’ s vehicle entered through the gates of Paisely Park on Tuesday afternoon, followed by about a dozen unmarked vehicles

Asked why investigators had returned to Paisely Park, Car ver County Sheriff ’ s Chief Deputy Jason Kamerud told The Associated Press by phone that they were “being thorough ”

GIBSON / THE NEW YORK T MES
Attorney General Loretta Lynch, right, and Vanita Gupta, head of the Justice Department's civil rights division, discuss a law limiting public restroom access for transgender people at a conference in Washington Monday

Garrett Finishes Career With Second Most C.U. Wins

Champion strives to make U.S. Olympic team in future

WRESTLING

Continued from page 19

Ol y m p i c t e a m A n d w h i l e h e w o n ’ t re p res e n t t h e Un i t e d St a t e s i n R i o t h i s s u mm e r, i t w o u l d b e a m i s t a k e t o b e t a g a i n s t Ga r re t t d o n n i n g t h a t U S s i n g l e t d ow n t h e ro a d “ My w re s t l i n g , t h e d e s i re

“If I won, I’m a winner and if I lost, I’m a loser. Anything in between was always me showing myself that I am good or that I’m the best

i s e n e r g y a g a i n t ow a rd s a b i g g e r g o a l : m a k i n g a n

Joon

Miami Heat

Top Raptors In Overtime, Tie Up Series

MIAMI (AP) Just about everyone struggled to score, with one very notable exception

Dwyane Wade was rolling

And the Miami Heat couldn’t be more thankful

Wa d e s c o re d 3 0 p o i n t s , including the layup that sent the game to overtime and finished off Miami’s frantic comeback from a nine-point deficit, as the Heat beat the Toronto Raptors 94-87 i

o n Monday night

The series is tied 2-2, heading t o To ro n t o f o r Ga m e 5 o n Wednesday

“It looked dark for a minute,” Wade said, “but there was no quit in us ” It looked dark for a lot of minutes before Wade and the Heat figured it out Goran Dragic had 15 points, including a threep o i n

y t h a t j u s t a b o u t clinched it for the Heat with 22 4 s e c o n d s l e f

n ove r t i m e Jo e Johnson also scored 15, despite still being without a 3-pointer in this series but setting the tone with two blocked shots in the first 59 seconds of the extra session

Wade didn’t score in overtime until his steal and dunk closed the scoring He didn’t have to, either

“I was tired,” Wade said “I was using myself as a decoy All eyes were on me and I wasn ’ t going to force anything ” Miami led for only 13 seconds in the fourth quarter, but never trailed in overtime the third time in four games the Heat and Raptors needed five extra minutes to decide a winner

LOUIS LIU 18

PAULINA GLASS 18

BRONFIN 18

SUZY PARK ’18

JOSEPHINE CHU 18

COLLINS ’17

COHEN 18

KANTOR ’19

CHEW 17

GWENDOLYN AVILES ’18

GRINSPOON 17

Tess Keppler law Annie O’Toole grad David Roy grad Ethan Berkowitz 16 Aditi Bhowmick

Independent Since 1880

SOFIA HU 17

JORDAN EPSTEIN 18 Advertising Manager

SOPHIA DENG 18 Blogs Editor

CAMERON POLLACK ’18

Photography Editor JOSH GIRSKY 19

DIVYANSHA SEHGAL ’18

STEPHANIE YAN 18 Assistant News Editor

ZACHARY SILVER ’19

SIERRA RINALDI 18

REBECCA BLAIR ’17

NEWS BOARD

ARTS BOARD

PHOEBE KELLER 18

YUN SOO KIM ’17

TROY SHERMAN 18

Arts & Entertainment Editor

EMILY JONES 18

SHAN DHALIWAL ’18 Assistant Sports Editor MELODY LI 17

Design Editor MEGAN LEE ’18

MICHAELA BREW 18

Editor JOON LEE ’17

Julia Dagum ’16 Ian Sigalow ’16 Kay Xiao 16

DINING BOARD

Elizabeth Gorman ’18

Laurence Lam ’18

Fowler 18

Cathy Zhang ’18 Nicole Kim ’19 Evan Kravitz 19

Olivia Lutwak 18 Qijia Yu 18

Lou Yu 16 Karen Shibuya ’16 Caroline Giles 17

Lindsay Cayne 17 Jake

a u t i o n : t h i s i s a l o w - k e y s e n t i m e n t a l c o l u m n L o t s o f f e e l i n g s , l o t s o f e m o t i o n s I l i s t e n t o l o t s o f

D r a k e T h e r e m i g h t b e s o m e j o k e s h e r e o r t h e r e , b u t m o s t l y j u s t h e a r t f e l t w o r d s a b o u t t h e m a c h i n a t i o n s o f m y i n n e r s o u l B u t y e a h a n y w a y s , h e r e ’ s m y c o l u m n Ev e r y b o d y h a s t h a t o n e p e r s o n , o r s e v e r a l p e o p l e , t h a t t h e y s e e m t o s e e e v e r y w h e r e o n c a m p u s Yo u d o n ’ t k n o w t h e i r n a m e , y o u d o n ’ t k n o w w h a t t h e y ’ r e l i k e a n d y o u ’ v e n e v e r h e a r d t h e i r v o i c e , b u t t h e y ’ r e r e a l l y d a m n h o t S i n c e y o u ’ v e n e v e r b e e n i n t r o d u c e d , t h e r e ’ s n o t h i n g t o d o b u t a v o i d e y e c o n t a c t a n d w o n d e r w h y, o f a l l t h e p e o p l e a t t h i s c r u n c h y a s s s c h o o l , t h i s o n e p e r s o n h a s s u c h a p r e s e n c e i n y o u r l i f e A n d w h y y o u m o s t l i k e l y h a v e s u c h a p r e s e n c e i n t h e i r s Sp r i n g s e m e s t e r o f 2 0 1 5 , w h i c h w a s t h e l a t t e r h a l f o f m y s o p h o m o r e y e a r, I t o o k t w o a r t h i s t o r y c o u r s e s T h e r e w a s a g i r l i n b o t h o f t h o s e c l a s s e s w h o m I r e c o g n i z e d f r o m o n e o f t h e a r t h i s t o r y c o u r s e s I h a d t a k e n t h e s e m e s t e r b e f o r e It w a s a s t r a n g e c o i n c i d e n c e t h a t w e h a d s o m a n y s c h e d u l e o v e r l a p s , e s p e c i a l l y w i t h t h e e x t e n s i v e l i s t o f a r t h i s t o r y c l a s s e s o f f e r e d t o f u l f i l l t h e m a j o r I e v e n s t a r t e d s e e i n g h e r m o r e a r o u n d o t h e r p a r t s o f c a m p u s ; s h e w a s m y m y s t e r y I -

s e e - y o u - e v e r y w h e r e p e r s o n S h e w a s a l s o t h e m o s t a t t r a ct i v e p e r s o n I h a d p r o b a b l y e v e r s e e n , s o I d e f i n i t e l y w a s n ’ t

c o m p l a i n i n g T h r e e f u l l s e m e s t e r s p a s s e d a n d n e i t h e r o f u s s p o k e t o e a c h o t h e r o r m a d e e y e c o n t a c t , b u t c l e a r l y w e k n e w w h o t h e o t h e r w a s We k e p t h a v i n g c l a s s e s t o g e t h e r s m a l l ,

I have Tinder to thank for giving me another friend at Cornell; once we matched (wink wink) it provided the channel to be able to start talking to this person whom I had “known” for over a year and a half but hadn’t had the gall or the right situation to be able to become familiar with.

d i s c u s s i o n - s t y l e c l a s s e s y e t s o m e h o w d e f i e d a l l o d d s a n d n e v e r o n c e s p o k e I s a t b e h i n d h e r f o r a n u m b e r o f h o u r s I d o n ’ t w a n t t o t r y a n d c a l c u l a t e , s a w h e r a t l e a s t o n c e a w e e k i n p a s s i n g s o m e w h e r e e l s e o n c a m p u s a n d r a n i n t o h e r a t o p e n p a r t i e s It w a s n ’ t u n t i l M a r c h o f t h i s s e m e s t e r t h a t w e f i n a l l y b r o k e d o w n t h e i n v i s i b l e w a l l a n d s t a r t e d t a l k i n g O h a l s o t h i s h a p p e n e d o n Ti n d e r Pe o p l e g i v e Ti n d e r a t o u g h b r e a k b e c a u s e o f i t s p u r e f o c u s o n p h y s i c a l a t t r a c t i v e n e s s a n d i t s i n t e n d e d p u r p o s e a s t h e p r e m i e r h o o k u p a p p D o n ’ t g e t m e w r o n g , I d o w nl o a d e d Ti n d e r f o r t h e s a m e r e a s o n e v e r y o t h e r h o r m o n er i d d l e d y o u t h o n t h i s c a m p u s d i d H o w e v e r, t h e a p p d e s e r v e s s o m u c h m o r e c r e d i t t h a n I p r e v i o u s l y t h o u g h t I h a v e Ti n d e r t o t h a n k f o r g i v i n g m e a n o t h e r f r i e n d a t C o r n e l l ; o n c e w e m a t c h e d ( w i n k w i n k ) i t p r o v i d e d t h e c h a n n e l t o b e a b l e t o s t a r t t a l k i n g t o t h i s p e r s o n w h o m I h a d “ k n o w n ” f o r o v e r a y e a r a n d a h a l f b u t h a d n ’ t h a d t h e g a l l o r t h e r i g h t s i t u a t i o n t o b e a b l e t o b e c o m e f a m i l i a r w i t h My c l e v e r i c e b r e a k e r o f “ h e y u w a n n a t a l k a b o u t s o m e a r t t y p e s h i t ” r e s u l t e d i n u s e x c h a n g i n g n u m b e r s a n d s t a r t i n g t o f i n a l l y f i g u r e o u t w h y t h e u n i v e r s e w a s s o i n s i st e n t t h a t w e k n o w e a c h o t h e r I f y o u ’ r e a s k i n g y o u r s e l f h o w t h i s f a i r y t a l e e n d s , t h e a n s w e r i s t h a t i t ’ s s t i l l i n p r o g r e s s B y t h i s I m e a n s h e s t i l l h a s n ’ t r e p l i e d t o m y o r i g i n a l m e s s a g e I f y o u ’ r e r e a d i n g t h i s m y s t e r y a r t h i s t o r y b e a u t y, p l e a s e r e p l y I p r o m i s e I ’ m a f u n a n d n i c e g u y Na h , j u s t k i d d i n g S h e ’ s m y g i r l f r i e n d n o w G o d b l e s s Ti n d e r S o r r y f o r t h e s e n t i m e n t a l p o s t H a v e a g r e a t f i n a l s w e e k e v e r y o n e ! A n d i f y o u g e t b o r e d , d o w n l o a d t i n d e r a n d s t a r t s w i p i n g Yo u n e v e r k n o w w h o y o u m i g h t m e e t

A k s h a y Ja i n i s a j u n i o r i n t h e C o l l e g e o f Ar t s & S c i e n c e s He c a n b e re a c h e d a t a j 2 6 5 @ c o r n e l l e d u C o l l e g e St u f f a p p e a r s a l t e r n a t e We d n e s d a y s t h i s s e m e s t e r

Web

Com men t of the day

“It takes great courage to articulate these thoughts, and with such poignancy – the fate of the foodie is a uniquely tortuous one That you are so self-aware is already a step in the right direction. Remember that your mind is the most powerful agent: for your disorder, but also for re-order.”

Dear Cornell…

c a n n o t b e l i e v e t h a t i t h a s b e e n f o u r y e a r s a n d t h a t i t i s f i n a l l y m y t u r n t o g r a d u a t e It f e e l s l i k e I h a v e s p e n t m y w h o l e l i f e w o r k i n g t o w a r d s a n d w a i t i n g f o r t h i s m o m e n t A s a k i d , I c o u l d n o t w a i t t o b e “ g r o w n ” A s a h i g h s c h o o l e r, I

d r e a m t o f c o l l e g e e v e r y d a y

S o m e t i m e s I s t i l l d r e a m a b o u t c o l l e g e i f I ’ m b e i n g h o n e s t I w o n d e r i f I d i d t h e l a s t f o u r y e a r s “ r i g h t ” D i d I w o r k h a r d e n o u g h ? Pa r t y e n o u g h ? E x p e r i e n c e l i f e e n o u g h ?

T h e a n s w e r s t o t h o s e q u e st i o n s d o e s n o t m a t t e r o f c o u r s e B e c a u s e , e v e n i f t h e a n s w e r w a s n o , I ’ m s t u c k w i t h t h e c o l l e g e e x p e r i e n c e t h a t I ’ v e g o t Fo r t u n a t e l y, I ’ m p r e t t y h a p p y w i t h i t p r e t t y h a p p y w i t h i t a n d e x t r e m e l y g r a t e f u l f o r i t I r e m e m b e r g e t t i n g i n t o C o r n e l l a n d b e i n g s o e x c i t e d b e c a u s e I

w a y s w a n t e d

t e n d a n Iv y L e a g u e u n i v e r s i t y, a n d w i t h m y a c c e p t a n c e t h a t d r e a m c o u l d c o m e t r u e It’s f u n n y t h o u g h b e c a u s e , I t h r e w o u t t h e i n i t i a l b r o c h u r e t h a t C o r n e l l s e n t m e T h a n k G o d m y m o m s a w i t , b e l i e v e d i n t h e m a r k e t i n g a n d s t r o n g l y s u g g e s t e d , I m e a n m a d e m e a p p l y b e c a u s e f o u r y e a r s l a t e r, I c a n ’ t i m a g i n e h a v i n g g o n e t o s c h o o l a n y w h e r e e l s e C o m i n g h e r e o p e n e d u p m y w o r l d D o n ’ t g e t m e w r o n g , I a l w a y s k n e w t h a t t h e r e w a s m o r e t o t h e w o r l d t h a n m y o w n b a c k y a r d a n d I a l w a y s b e l i e v e d I h a d a r e s p o n s i b i l i t y t o p e o p l e a r o u n d t h e g l o b e B u t , I s t r u gg l e d w i t h f i g u r i n g o u t h o w t o r e a c h t h e m , h o w t o e n g a g e , h o w t o b e c o m e o n e o f t h e m I a l w a y s k n e w t h a t I w a n t e d m o r e f o r m y s e l f t h a n j u s t e x p e r i e n c i n g w h e r e I ’ m f r o m a n d C o r n e l l m a d e t h a t p o s s i b l e b y l a y i n g a s e a o f o p p o r t u n i t i e s a t m y f e e t A l l I h a d t o d o w a s p i c k w h i c h f i s h I w a s i n t e r e s t e d i n a n d s o m e h o w r e e l i t i n S o m e , I c a u g h t e a s i l y O t h e r s w e r e a s t r u g g l e a n d s o m e e v a d e m e t o t h i s d a y A s a f r e s h m a n , I h a d a p o s t - i t o n m y w a l l t h a t s a i d , “ Fo r g e t t h e B i g R e d B o x e s a n d j u s t m a k e y o u r C o r n e l l s t o r y a g o o d o n e ” T h i s h a s b e e n m y g u i d i n g

And if you have the courage to trust in the magic of your life, plus the gall to follow through, I believe there is no way you can leave this place worse off than you were when you first arrived here.

l i g h t H a v i n g b i g g o a l s , b u t r e m a i n i n g f l e x i b l e i n h o w I t r y t o a c h i e v e t h e m i n c a s e t h e Un i v e r s e d e c i d e s i t h a s o t h e r, h o p e f u l l y b e t t e r p l a n s i n s t o r e f o r m e I w o u l d a d m o n i s h a l l w h o w i l l s t i l l i n h a b i t t h e Hi l l n e x t y e a r t o d o t h e s a m e It’s s o e a s y t o g e t c a u g h t u p i n c l a s s e s , w o r k , t r y i n g t o s e c u r e a g o o d i n t e r n s h i p a n d p l a n n i n g f o r w h a t e v e r w i l l c o m e n e x t I k n o w f i r s t h a n d b e c a u s e I h a v e b e e n g u i l t y o f t h i s m o r e t i m e s t h a n I w o u l d l i k e t o a d m i t B u t , I p r o m i s e y o u t h a t i t d o e s a l l w o r k o u t , e v e n w h e n i t l o o k s l i k e i t w o n ’ t a n d a l l y o u c a n r e a ll y e v e r d o i t y o u r p a r t a n d k e e p t h e f a i t h i n t h e p r o c e s s C o r n e l l i s a n i n s t i t u t i o n t h a t m a k e s y o u b e l i e v e i t i s a n d w i l l a l w a y s b e t h e m o s t i m p o r t a n t t h i n g i n y o u r w o r l d B u t i t i s n ’ t a n d i t w o n ’ t b e M a k e s u r e t h a t y o u g e t e v e r yt h i n g y o u w a n t f r o m t h i s p l a c e L a s t w e e k , s o m e o n e a s k e d m e i f I r e g r e t t e d a n y t h i n g a b o u t m y e x p e r i e n c e o r i f I w i s h I h a d d o n e a n y t h i n g d i f f e r e n t l y a n d i t b r o u g h t m e s u c h j o y t o b e a b l e t o t e l l t h e m , n o My o n e , ov e ra r c h i n g g o a l , w h e n I e n t e r e d C o r n e l l a s a f r e s h m a n w a s t o m i l k t h i s p l a c e f o r e v e r y t h i n g i t ’ s w o r t h a n d f o u r y e a r s l a t e r, I k n o w I ’ v e d o n e t h a t Yo u r C o r n e l l e x p e r i e n c e w i l l n o t b e t h e s a m e a s t h e p e r s o n n e x t t o y o u a n d t h a t i s t h e m a g i c o f t h i s p l a c e Ye s , w e a l l e x p e r i e n c e a s i m i l a r f o r m o f t o r t u r e , b u t t h e d e v i l i s i n t h e d e t a i l s , s o d o n ’ t b e a f r a i d t o b u i l d o n y o u r d e t a i l s t o s t a n d o u t I f y o u l e t i t , C o r n e l l w i l l p l a c e y o u w i t h p e o p l e , i n s i t u a t i o n s , d o i n g t h i n g s t h a t y o u m a y b e o n l y e v e r d r e a m t a b o u t A n d i f y o u h a v e t h e c o u r a g e t o t r u s t i n t h e m a g i c o f y o u r l i f e , p l u s t h e g a l l t o f o l l o w t h r o u g h , I b e l i e v e t h e r e i s n o w a y y o u c a n l e a v e t h i s p l a c e w o r s e o f f t h a n y o u w e r e w h e n y o u f i r s t a r r i v e d h e r e S o , t o d a y, i n m y l a s t c o lu m n f o r T h e Su n , I ’d s i m p l y l i k e t o s a y t h a n k y o u T h a n k y o u C o r n e l l f o r g i v i n g m e m o r e t

Hanna Reichel
Behind

Special Publication Advertising Deadlines

Graduation Issue

Deadline: Friday, May 13 noon

Publication Date: Wednesday, May 25

Reunion Issue

Deadline: Friday, May 13 noon

Publication Date: Thursday, June 9

Freshman Issue

Deadline: Thursday, June 30

noon

Publication Date: Thursday, July 14

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

o p h o d g e p o d g e i s g o o d m u s i c , a r t o r b o t h ? Or a re t h e y s i t t i n g i n Sa c r a m e n t o , l a u g h i n g a t t h e i r l e g i o n s o f h y p e rd e d i c a t e d f a n s f o r f a l l i n g f o r t h e i r j o k e ? Ei t h e r w a y, t h e y ’ re s m a r t e r t h a n a l l o f u s L i s t e n i n g t o t h e i r l a t e s t re l e a s e , t h o u g h , w a s t h e f i r s t t i m e t h e “ a re t h e y f u c k i n g w i t h u s ” t h o u g h t n e ve r

c ro s s e d m y m i n d B o t t o m l e s s Pi t i s w i t h o u t a d o u b t t h e i r m o s t we l l - s t r u c t u re d e f f o r t ye t Eve r y t r a c k f a l l s o n t h e re c o rd f a l l s i n t o a n i n f e c t i o u s g ro ove , i t ’ s q u i t e m e l o d i c a n d h a s s e g m e n t s t h a t a re d a re I s a y

c a t c h y It’s m o m e n t s l i k e t h e s h o u t - a l o n g c h o r u s o f “ T h re e

Be d ro o m s In A Go o d Ne i g h b o r h o o d” t h a t u r g e m e t o

re c o m m e n d B o t t o m l e s s Pi t a s a De a t h Gr i p s j u m p i n g -

o f f p o i n t If yo u ’ ve n e ve r h e a rd t h e m b e f o re ( h ow ? ) o r yo u t h o u g h t t h e y we re t o o ro u g h o n t h e e a r s , t r y

B o t t o m l e s s Pi t o n f o r s i ze If yo u ’ re s t i l l n o t s w a ye d , I

c o u l d p l a y t h e “ yo u j u s t d o n ’ t g e t i t ” c a rd , b u t h e y, i t

c a n ’ t b e f o r e ve r yo n e If M C R i d e ’ s l y r i c s we re j u s t a b i t m o re d e c i p h e r -

a b l e , I ’d b e s h o u t i n g a l o n g w i t h t h i s a l b u m f ro m s t a r t

t o f i n i s h W h e re a s t h e i r p re v i o u s re l e a s e s f e l t m o re

i n t e l l e c t u a l , m o re h i g h c o n c e p t , B o t t o

“Happy came to visit me, he brought cookies on the way ” Mitski softly spills out the words in a ghostly, vibrating mumble, over a quick, blasting automatic weapon-esque dr um machine pulse on her single “Happy” the second pre-released t r a c k f ro m h e r f o r t h c o m i n g

Puber ty 2 The track is a beautiful myster y: a queer, sad, riddle of a song

The track recounts the memor y of a visit from Happiness (who goes by male pronouns) who laid her down, told her it would all be okay, then vanishes while she’s in the bathroom, leaving a mess and reminders of the visit in his wake for the singer to clean up

In the song ’ s three brief verses, Mitski cr ystallizes the intoxication of happiness the ever ythingness of small moments, the sun-filled room, cookies and tea with a lover and the violent

m

o d i c t h

t s o n g s w i t h f o u r b a r s o f o n e n o t e “ Sp i k e s ” s h a re s s o m e t w i s t i n g e l em e n t s o f m a i n s t re a m d u b s t e p ( l o o k i n g a t yo u , d e a dm a u 5 ) , w h i l e t h e a l b u m ’ s t i t l e t r a c k p l a y s l i k e a p u n k j a m w i t h a h a rd - ro c k e d g e u n d e r M C R i d e ’ s a b s t r a c t r a p s So m e w h a t l e s s e x p e c t e d l y, “ Ho t He a d” s o u n d s l i k e a 1 6 - b i t v i d e o g a m e s o u n d t r a c k g o n e h a y w i re , a n d b e h i n d t h e g r i m e o f “ R i n g A Be l l” l i e s a d i s t i n c t l y va p o r g ro ove

B o t t o m l e s s Pi t a l s o e x h i b i t s De a t h Gr i p s ’ m u c hi m p rove d h a n d l e o n t e x t u re a n d s p a c e t h a n t h e i r p rev i o u s w o rk Pe r h a p s d u e t o t h e i r re c e n t i n s t r u m e n t a l p ro j e c t , In t e r v i e w 2 0 1 6 , t h e g ro u p ’ s s o u n d i s n ow f u l l e r a n d m o re c o m p l e t e t h a n e ve r T h e p o p p i n g s y n t h s o n “ Eh” t h a t a re h a l f w a y b e t we e n a c o m p u t e r i n a ’ 7 0 s s c i - f i f i l m a n d a Ky g o b r i d g e l i ve i n t h re e d i m e n s i o n s , a n d t h e m u d d y s we l l s o f “ 8 0 8 0 8 ” f i l l s o n i c s p a c e u n l i k e a n y t h i n g f ro m No L ove , De e p We b

o r e ve n T h e Powe r s T h a t B

O ve r t h i s s t e l l a r p ro d u c t i o n w o rk f ro m Za c h Hi l l a n d A n d y Mo r i n re s i d e s M C R i d e ’ s n o - h o l d s - b a r re d vo c a l s Hi s d e l i ve r y i s a s f o rc e

l a s e ve r, f i

d w i t h a n g r y u r g e n c y Hi s f e ro c i o u s b a r s l e n d f u r t h e r i n t e n

s i t y t o t h e a l re a d y g r i p p i n g a l b u m , w i t h 1 0 0 p e rc e n t i n t e l l i g i b i l i t y a l

s

b s i t e Sp o i l e r : t h e y ’ r e m a n i c i n d e e d Ho n e s t l y, u n i n t e l l i g i b i l i t y i s f a vo r a b l e t o m o s t o f t h e i n c o h e re n t b a b b l e b e i n g s p o u t e d by M C R i d e ( u n l e s s , a g a i n , t h e y ’ re s m a r t e r t h a n a l l o f u s ) Fo r i l l u s t r a t i o n ’ s s a k e , h e re ’ s a c h o i c e s n i p p e t f ro m t h e t i t l e t r a c k : “ Ga g ’ t i l I ’ m a l l d re n c h e d / f u c k e d yo u i n h a l f / I s e e yo u f i e n d i n g m a r ve l o u s / Ga g b a l l s d ro o l i n g p o o l s ” Um “ g a g b a l l s ” Ly r i c a l c o n t e n t a s i d e b e c a u s e h e y, yo u p ro b a b l y w o n ’ t u n d e r s t a n d i t a n y w a y B o t t o m l e s s Pi t i s t h e m o s t a p p ro a c h a b l e , i f n o t t h e f l a t - o u t b e s t , De a t h Gr i p s e f f o r t t o d a t e T h e i r m u s i c a l a p p ro a c h i s m o re m a t u re , i n t e l l i g e n t a n d s k i l l e d t h a n e ve r, w i t h a f i n e s s e t h a t m i n i m i ze s a b j e c t b r u t a l i t y w i t h o u t s a c r if i c i n g r a g e Pa s t De a t h Gr i p s re l e a s e s h a ve m a d e m e f e e l l i k e a n o n l o o k e r i n t o t h e g ro u p ’

hangover of the come-down, the desperation to get it back However, the most haunting emotion on the track, is Mitski’s apathy about the whole affair: that she is not hear tbroken, screaming or cr ying: just a little bit sad, as she quietly cleans up the debris: “And I turned around to see/All the cookie wrappers/And the empty cups of tea/Well I signed and mumbled to myself/Again I have to clean ” As it turns out, ambivalence about hear tbreak is much sadder than hear tbreak by itself We know what to do with hear tbreak; it is familiar and legible to us, and we have libraries of rock and roll songs to tell us how to feel and heal Ambivalence about happiness, however, is a different and much scarier game of existence

Mitski has made sad songs, haunting songs and strange songs before they comprise the bulk of her last album, Bur y Me At Makeout Creek but

never like this before The macabre non-love stor y is woven into a carnivalesque soundscape of instr umentals and production The track is an experiment, into a St Vincent, or tUnE-yArDs-ian land of acerbic, uneven, discordant beats, minor-key s a xo p h o n e r

dr ums and, generally, having no idea what to expect the next note will bring The biggest surprise for me on the track comes with the indelible chor us, when Mitski cries out “And if you ’ re going, take the train/So I can hear it r umble, one last r umble/And when you go/take this hear t/I’ll make no more use of it,” not liberated, but confident in her capacity to self-preser ve and carr y on

Jael Goldfine is a junior in the College of Arts and Sciences She

Internet denizens mocked Kylie Jenner for her Kylie Up Close video in which she proclaimed, “I feel like ever y year has a new energy, and I feel like this year is reall about, like, the year of just realizing stuff ” Yet, if the four-and-a-smidgen months have been any indication, the mainstream music world is ver y much so been experiencing a period of new, bizarre bursts of energy and impor tant realizations In the case of the Red Hot Chili Peppers, this realization comes in the form of realizing that perhaps an impor tant bond ran under the group ’ s long-r unning par tnership with Def Jam founder and super-producer Rick Rubin Rubin, after all, brought the group three stellar albums in a row: 1999’s Californication, 2002’s By t h e Wa y a n d 2 0 0 6 ’ s St a d i u m A r c a d i u m Additionally, all of the albums featured guitarist John Fr usciante, whose guitar work, when considered alongside the funky, cr unchy guitar licks of singer/guitarist Anthony Kiedis, arguably wormed their way into listeners’ ears even more effectively than Anthony Kiedis’ often cr yptic vocals Yet, upcoming album The Getaway instead features Josh Klinghoffer, who has toured with the band since 2007 and appeared on 2011’s I’m With You, and producer Danger Mouse Danger Mouse is not a producer to be dismissed His combinatorial mash-up of the Beatles

and Jay-Z, 2004’s The Grey Album, cast two often over-idolized ar tists into a radically rejuvenated and reimaged light He has worked with a plethora of ar tists, from A$AP Rocky to Beck, and, perhaps mostly notably, teamed up with crooner-cum-TV judge Cee-Lo Green to concoct Gnarls Barkley If the opening hits of Gnarls Barkley’s 2008 “Crazy” have ever synced up with your adrenaline-fueled hear tbeat and pumped you up for a wild night, you have Danger Mouse to thank And yet, he is not the right producer for the Red Ho t

Necessities,” the group ’ s first single off of The Getaway After all, the Red Hot Chili Peppers long thrived off of always seeminge slightly off-kilter Despite the many studio takes required to create them, tracks like “Dani California” and “Can’t Stop” always felt like the band nailed them on the first take, slight flubs and all However, Danger Mouse (and, in fairness, an older, calmer RHCP line-up) have put a track that lacks most elements that first endeared listeners to the group

The first 30 seconds of the track, which are propelled by muted bass, clean guitar and hi-hat pattering, sound like inoffensive instr umental music written to underscore the trailer of a political thriller film After the initial swell, Flea’s funky bassline and Kiedis’ characteristic stuttering vocals

A l i c i a K e y s “ I n C o m m o n ”

RCA Records

Whenever ar tists take moderately lengthy hiatuses between projects, suspicion inevitably arises as to what their next release will bring A period working on side projects might bring about a radical shift away from the creator ’ s previous ethos (think Fall Out Boy’s radical mainstream shift on Save Rock and Roll) Alternatively, a break from the demands of touring and recording can bring about an inspired, reinvigorated release Consequently, Alicia Keys’ single “In Common” that was released leading up to her first release in four years granted fans a first peek at how Keys intends to frame her new work In tr uth, “In Common” does not fall neatly into

either categor y outlined above. Keys undoubtedly has her finger on the pulse of recent pop releases

The pulsing, understated beat of “In Common” calls to mind Rihanna’s current mega-hit “ Work,” while her confessional lyrics fall in live with Justin Bieber’s “Love Yourself ” (and countless other pop hits, without a doubt) Above all else, the constant of Keys’ music her always exemplar y ability to conver y rich, aching emotion through her voice has not wavered

The ultimate strength of “In Common,” however, lies in its lyrics Keys throws a head-fake at the listener At first she seems to politely break up with a former lover, singing, “ We got way too much in

cut in to tr uly usher in the track Unfor tunately, both musicians’ contributions sound merely like lackluster imitations of their previous work

Strings and piano are the most conspicuous additions to the band’s toolkit, and feature prominently at a break that occurs around the three minute-mark At that moment, the over whelming strangeness that nags at the listener throughout “Dark Necessities” bubbles over Are the Red Hot Chili Peppers even tr ying to still write rock tracks?

Still, if RHCP are still tr ying to crank out rock releases, “Dark Necessities” falls shor t And if they’re instead aiming for mainstream, toothless rock-pop, well, it falls shor t as well Perhaps the single was an odd choice to evidence the type of material to expect from The Getaway If not, however, RHCP listeners must face the same concern as many fans as aging rock bands and consider that their once rebellious heroes have become complacent in the studio

Where have the rapid-fire lyrics, distor ted riffs and hyperactive funk dr umming that once defined the Red Hot Chili Peppers gone? Perhaps we will find out later this year, but I fear listeners will be disappointed

Shay Collins is a sophomore in the College of Arts and Sciences He can be reached at scollins@cornell edu

common/If I’m being honest with you. ” However, Keys then reveals the painful, relatable hear t of the track: insecurity Keys weaves a multi-layered skein of connection, fear of intimacy and complicated love “If you could love somebody like me, ” Keys concludes, “ You must be messed up too ”

If Ke y s p

throughout the rest of her album, it will undoubtedly continue the trend of hear t-baring, beautiful pop music In essence, Keys has not left, but rather expanded upon her incredibly power ful voice

n c i e n t Ju l e s , ” i s n o e x c e pt i o n “A n c i e n t Ju l e s ” p o s i t i o n s t h e s i n g e r / s o n gw r i t e r ( s e e , e v e n h i s m o s t f i t t i n g m o n i k e r i s a s u s e d u p a n d v a p i d a s a n y g e n r e - l a b e l i n t h e p o pu l a r c a n o n c o u l d b e ) s q u a r e l y i n l i n e w i t h a w h o l e d y n a s t y o f e p h e m e r a l s t r u m m e r s a n d j u s tb a r e l y - g o o d - e n o u g h l y r i c i s t s : t h i n k W i l l i e Ni l e , t h i n k M a r k K n o p f l e r s o l o , t h i n k l a t t e r - d a y e xBy rd s , t h i n k Ku r t V i l e . Ye a h , t h i n k Ku r t V i l e e s p e c i a l l y T h e y c u t a n a l b u m t o g e t h e r j u s t l a s t y e a r, a n d , a m o n g o t h e r s i m i l a r i t i e s t h a t a l l s u r e l y s p r i n g o u t o f n o t h a v i n g t h a t m a n y i d e a s , t h e y b o t h h a v e a c e r t a i n p r o c l i v i t y f o r m a k i n g s o n g s t h a t a r e a b o u t t w i c e a s l o n g a s t h e y s h o u l d b e A l t h o u g h , V i l e l i k e s t o w e a r t h a t g u i t a r p l a y i n g m o r e o n h i s s l e e v e a n d p u t i t h i g h e r i n t h e m i x , a n d h e f e e l s m o r e c o m f o r t a b l e g e t t i n g a l i t t l e e d g i e r i n t h e l y r i c d e p a r t m e n t t h a n s u c h i n g r a i n e d r o c k“ p o e t i c ” p l a t i t u d e s a s “ Yo u w e r e l o s t / o n t h e r o a d f r o m a d i f f e r e n t w a y / p u s h e d t o o f a r / m i l e s a w a y ” ( a r e a l l y r i c f r o m e i t h e r “A n c i e n t Ju l e s ” o r j u s t a b o u t a n y o t h e r g u i t a rr o c k t r a c k s i n c e 1 9 7 2 ) T h a t ’ s n o t t o s a y i t d o e s n ’ t s o u n d n i c e ; s o m et h i n g a s i n n o c u o u s a s a

SCIENCE

Imagine there are five railroad workers stuck on a track and a train is quickly approaching You have the chance to save these five people, but you would have to push someone else in front of the train to stop it Would you do it?

In a recent study co-authored by Prof David Pizarro, psychology, researchers found that people can judge trustworthiness based on answers to a hypothetical moral dilemma like this one The results of this study were published in Journal of Experimental Psychology: General last month

Re s e a rc h e r s f ro m C o r n e l l a n d O x f o rd University asked over 2,400 participants if they would be willing to kill one innocent person to save five others They then asked participants to play an economic game to evaluate trust Participants were required to lend money to people who either answered yes or no to the moral dilemma question and then asked how likely they thought they were to get the money back

people to be less trustworthy

Individuals who said they would sacrifice one to save many were consistently deemed less trustworthy

“However, if you report that you made a decision [to kill one person in order to save five] with great difficulty, then people are less mistrusting of you ” Pizarro said

Understanding why this is the case is a little trickier

Although the majority of people would refuse to push someone in front of a train, there are rational arguments

Regardless of the participant’s answer to the moral dilemma, par ticipants over whelmingly answered that someone who was willing to kill someone to save five others would also be less likely to give them their money back

“Even in these hypothetical dilemmas, people are more likely to trust somebody who refuses to do something for the greater good,” Pizarro said

These findings indicate that participants found these

If you ’ ve ever seen footage of enormous buildings swaying uncontrollably during an earthquake or actually felt the Earth opening under your feet, you would know just how terrifying an earthquake can be For people in earthquake prone areas who have to endure the natural phenomena on a regular basis, it is important that their homes are safer and more resilient A project team at Cornell aims to help with that Cornell University Seismic Design Team, started in 2013, works to model and prototype earthquake resilient buildings as part of an annual competi i Undergraduate Seismic Design Competition, n i z e d b y t h e E a r t h q u a k e E n g i n e e r i n g Re s e Institute For the competition, various nation and international teams submit a prototype of a building capable of withstanding var ying earthquake magnitudes within certain architectural constraints

“ T h e g o a l i s t o m a x i m i z e s t r u c t u r a l resilience of the building while at the same time taking into account other factors such as maximizing building income and minimizing weight,” said Sean Thompson ’18, architectural lead

Over three years, the team has been evolving design to ensure that its prototype doesn’t collap these testing scenarios that can mimic a magn eight earthquake As Thompson notes, experimentation is key to the team ’ s philosophy In the 2015 competition, the team added shear walls thin plaques i n s e r t e d b e t we e n c o l u m n s t o m i n i m i ze s i d e w a y s movement to their design

about trusting other people,” Pizarro noted

Many of daily actions are fundamentally based on trust Driving on a public road implicitly requires trusting other drivers to obey traffic rules Accepting a credit card or a check as payment relies on trust in other people to make those payments later

“So much of human society exists because people have been willing to trust each other and cooperate on things,” Pizarro said

Because of its integral role in shaping society, trust has become an interesting topic of study

“The big question is how do we determine that other people are trustworthy? Our whole lives are about trusting other people.”

Prof David Pizarro

that support both possible decisions in this hypothetical moral dilemma

“However, there’s a good reason why we might not trust people who say okay to killing someone right away, ” Pizarro said “ They might be lacking those emotions that make us good to each other ”

The significance of the study centers on understanding more fundamental aspects of society

“ The big question is, how do we determine that other people are trustworthy? Our whole lives are all

Whether it be figuring out who to start a business with or who to date, finding cues to determine if someone is trustworthy is critical to navigating our social world People look for “signals that you are the kind of person who cares about fairness and loyalty, who has empathy” Pizarro said This study reveals one of the multiple cues we use to make that judgment

According to Pizarro, the study illustrates that we evaluate others not only on actions but on their judgments as well

“Human beings are constantly evaluating others on this dimension of trustworthiness,” Pizarro said “ We’re pretty good at it and it actually has implications for how we treat other people ”

Mo r a l j u

research “For me it’s just interesting to understand how the mind works and how we socially interact ” Pizarro said On a larger scale, it taps into the myster y of how human cooperation arose

Mary Nattakom can be reached at mtn36@cornell edu

However, they learnt from this setback and the team managed to place third in this year ’ s competition that was held in Sans Francisco, California Much of this success goes to the team ’ s decision to add supercolumns four columns connected by diagonal braces to its prototype “ This is something that we came up with ourselves

The main reason you won ’ t find it in too many buildings is that it does cut a little into the floor space that is available,” Sean said

To support such innovation, the team is divided into three sub-teams structural design team, cons t r u c t i o n

IMAGE COURTESY OF SEAN THOMPSON

manufacturing of each component The architecture team works to design the building with regards to aesthetic appeal and ensures that it abides by the constraints posed by the competition

The prototypes often have to account for various requirements like certain floors need to be double the height of the others or elements like restaurants need to be included Part of the competition’s philosophy is to force teams to design earthquake proof buildings that can be used in real environments This often means that compromising on aesthetics and functionality is impossible

“ Though a fairly common structural component in areas prone to seismic activity, adding them [shear walls] may have actually lead to the collapse of the structure, ” Thompson said “And once your prototype collapses, it’s automatically placed in a much lower categor y ”

team and architecture team each of which perfects a different aspect of the building

The structural design team works to generate building models and uses simulation software to carefully tweak each to perform optimally Since the team also has to demonstrate its ability to construct these structures, a construction team overlooks the design and

“ We have to satisfy this main requirement to make the building withstands these quakes but at the e time we also have these other ver y real architecl requirements that can sometimes conflict with he structural integrity,” Thompson said

Despite the team ’ s success in overcoming many such challenges, Sean is adamant that there are significant obstacles left to tackle

“ We hope to carr y out more design analysis a n

, ” Thompson said “ We would use these tests to ensure that the actual software that models deflections is as accurate as possible because in the past we ’ ve seen error rates of 40 percent ” Daniel Wilentz ’16, team lead, said that it was emely satisfying to see their team sur vive the e shake table tests He also emphasized the need to spread awareness about seismology ideas and concepts

“Our goals are to instil knowledge regarding earthquake engineering within Cornell's engineering community and foster a stronger desire on campus to learn about seismology,” Wilentz said

For future semesters, the team hopes to be involved with the wider community by hosting quizzes and trivia that as Thompson puts it, “inspires youngsters to explore the fascinating world of structural design ”

can be reached at ag983@cornell edu

Arnav Ghosh
Circles and Stuff by Robert Radigan grad
Mr. Gnu by Travis Dandro

Faith Drives Garrett to First National Championship

Getting ready for the last wrestling match of his collegiate career, fighting for his first NCAA national title, Nahshon Garrett already knew he was a champion Waiting to face off against Cor y Clark, the No 2 seed at 133 pounds, the Cornell senior, the No 1 seed in the weight class, felt like the trophy, the championship, was already in his grasp

Wa i t i n g f o r h i s match somewhere in the

b a s e m e n t o f Ma d i s o n Square Garden, Garrett broke down into tears

“I had already known I

w a s g o i n g t o w i n , ”

tity was in wrestling, not only in wrestling, but in winning and being someone who was good at it and it was just like a life check ”

Garrett fought a big mental battle with himself as he struggled to recoup pride following his fifth-place finish “I believed what I did defined who I was, ” Garrett said “If I won, I’m a winner and if I lost, I’m a loser Anything in between was always me showing myself or showing other people that I am good or that I’m the best ”

“I’m a champion so therefore I do sprints instead of doing sprints to become something.”

Senior Nahshon Garrett

Garrett said “It was just a matter of time catching up to reality ” Just a year after he was upset as the presumptive favorite for a national championship, Garrett again found himself in a position to take, what he said he believed, was rightfully his

“ Thank you God for giving me this championship,” Garrett said “ You’re the best ”

With the Garden of Eden filled to capacity, Garrett went out and wrestled Clark, handily taking home a 7-6 victor y over the Hawkeye junior The championship was finally his The tears he expected to have were already shed

And when the last whistle blew, all he could do was lift up his arms in victor y, his right bicep which looks sculpted by the hands of Michelangelo featuring a Cornell “C” embroidered with a cross and three drops of blood dribbling down from the crucifix

The Mindset Shift

There was no room for Garrett coming into the season

After finishing as the national runner-up at 125 pounds his sophomore year, Garrett finished in fifth place in 2015 at the weight class The loss sent him into a depression as dealt with falling significantly short of the title, something many pundits expected him to pull out

“It was weird and it came out of nowhere and slapped me in the face,” Garrett said “I just didn’t understand what was going on I didn't know how much of my iden-

lowered stress on Garrett’s shoulders What should have been fun, the process, no longer felt enjoyable

o a

Garrett felt he need a m back to his foundation, h up in the household with locked up in jail, Garrett background in Chico, Cal putting in the energy to m 125 pounds to 133 poun the work to reset his ment

T h e c h a n g e w a s s u Garrett’s mind Instead ing hard to become a cha p

n , and therefore worked hard

“I’m a champion so t h e r e f o r e I d o s p r i n t instead of doing sprints t become something,” Gar said “ Then all of a sudden, you position your mind in a way that leads to success instead of a way that's dependent on failure and you establish who you are and who God has sent you ”

See WRESTLING page 6

” G a

Marisa Siergiej Finds Field Hockey Unexpectedly

A trip to a ftness expo in sixth grade became a successful college career for the senior captain

Although senior Ma S h not been playing field ho life, you would never kn ing her in a game The C numerous awards to her ing first and second-team American for the midea and the Class of ’91 awarded each year to hockey player with a pr future However, the 5’ lete humbly attributes h to her teammates

“I have a lot of accol name, but it’s funny beca my recognition and a lot are really based on the have such a strong team, ” “All of my defensive sta being surrounded by th who are great and a goa some ” Siergiej began playing when her mother took he expo in sixth grade and up for a team Before tha h e r y o u n g e r s i s t e r, f r Isabel Siergiej, had been g y m n a s t i c s How e v Siergiej’s mother wanted her to be able to play a sport at school

“ I w e n t t o t h e first practice and was

upset in the car cr ying because I didn’t know anyone But soon after, I fell in love and a few years later my little sisd [ l i ] M

Siergiej knew that she wanted to continue playing field hockey

“I really knew that I wanted to keep hl ics as part of my life,” she said “I know per se which sport I wanted to ut I knew that I really wanted to be f a team and be strategic with a team posed to an indil sport I also just d field hockey a lot n I knew I wanted ke it to the next and continue playo r a s l o n g a s I ” Cornell, Siergiej en a lot of success, ng the team this year as one of the co-captains However, one of the ghts for Siergiej was getting to play ornell with her younger sister Isabel We’ve always been really close and I it’s awesome [that I got to play with she said “ There are definitely things an learn from me in terms of balanchool and balancing hockey, but there o a lot of things that I learn from her practicing with her I’ve had a really experience with her, I just wish it were longer I hope I helped her settle in and now she can go on and make her own path and have her own Cornell experience ” W h i l e Si e

ver y quickly how to balance being a varsity

However, when considering options for life after Cornell, Siergiej was deciding between playing hockey at a professional level or taking on an engineering job

“I was actually considering going to

“I also just found field hockey a lot of fun. I knew I wanted to take it to the next level ”

Senior Marisa Siergiej

work,” she said “I had the chance to play internationally my freshman summer when I played in a club in Australia I really loved it because it the whole community revolved around hockey In America it’s not a popular sport ” However, Siergiej ultimately decided to move to Georgia next year in order to work at a paper making plant for Proctor and Gamble Nonetheless, Siergiej plans to always make field hockey a part of her life in some way

g i e j h a s b e e n a n anchor for the Red squad since her freshman year, she is also a process engineer, which forced her to learn

“I definitely want to keep field hockey in my life,” she said “I find field hockey a great way to exercise and stay in shape There’s a pickup league at Georgia Tech and I played there over the winter, so I know I’ll at least be doing pickup league In the future, hopefully i’ll move to a region with a lot of hockey going on I know I want to give back and coach younger kids ”

Anna Fasman be reached at afasman@cornellsun com

TOP 25SENIOR ATHLETES

TOP SENIOR MALE ATHLETE NAHSHON GARRETT — WRESTLING

TOP SENIOR FEMALE ATHLETE MARISA SIERGIEJ — FIELD HOCKEY

CASSANDRA POUDRIER WOMEN’S HOCKEY
MICHAEL BYRNE BASEBALL
ANGELICA GANGEMI FENCING
MEG PARKER SOFTBALL
DENA TANENBAUM WOMEN’S TENNIS
GREG DAVIS HEAVYWEIGHT ROWING
LUKE HAGY FOOTBALL
WILL OPREA LIGHTWEIGHT ROWING
ANNA WINSLOW POLO
ELENA WICKER POLO
ALICIA BAIR GYMNASTICS
VICTOR LUO MEN’S SWIMMING
JENNA IMMORMINO WOMEN’S SWIMMING
JOHN EDMONDS MEN’S LACROSSE
CAROLINE KELLNER TRACK & FIELD
ROBERT ROBBINS TRACK & FIELD
UDEME AKPAETE TRACK & FIELD
MAX HAIRSTON TRACK & FIELD
JJ FIVES FOOTBALL
EMILY TRIPODI WOMEN’S LACROSSE
BEN RAINERO TRACK & FIELD
CHARLOTTE TATE WOMEN’S SOCCER
REECE WILCOX MEN’S HOCKEY
PHOTOSBY CAMERON POLLACK, ADAM BRONFIN, CORNELL ATHLETICS

Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook