01-31-19 entire issue hi res

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INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 135, No. 50

THURSDAY, JANUARY 31, 2019

n

12 Pages – Free

ITHACA, NEW YORK

News

Arts

Sports

Weather

Soup and Hope

Walk the Moon Rocks Ithaca

Fighting On

See below stories

Speaker series to bring diverse perspectives to campus along with hot soup and bread. | Page 3

Men’s and women's hockey battle through adversity as their seasons continue.

Walk the Moon returned to Ithaca as part of their current tour. | Page 6

HIGH: 9º LOW: -6º

| Page 12

Polar Vortex Moves Over Ithaca C.U. Stays Open Despite Cold By NICHOLAS BOGEL-BURROUGHS

chief and others. Before coming to Cornell, Pollack was criticized when her previous campus remained open despite a similar wind chill warning. Cornell last Ithacans will be lucky if thermometers crack zero cancelled classes in March of 2018 in anticipation of a before 10 a.m. on Thursday. The wind chill will make heavy snowfall that fell short of projections. it feel 20 to 30 degrees colder than that. Exposed skin Tompkins County and much of Central New York could become frostbitten in just 10 minutes. will remain under the wind chill warning until 6 p.m. Cornell plans to remain open on Thursday, shrug- Thursday. The National Weather Service warned of ging off a wind chill warning, a last-minute email dangerously low wind chill temperatures that could blast to administrators from dozens of students and a get as low as minus 29 early on Thursday morning. petition signed by thousands encouraging People should stay indoors, the service said, the University to cancel classes because of and if they must go out, should limit their LOW: -5º the frigid temperatures. time outside and dress in layers. WIND CHILL: Rick Burgess, the vice president of The TCAT bus agency will offer free infrastructure, properties and planning, low as -29º rides on all routes on Thursday and TCAT said in an interview Wednesday night that officials expect its buses to operate as usual. WIND: he and other administrators expected to Cornell Meteorology Club explained 14 to 17 mph in aThe keep Cornell open. statement that a jet stream often brings “That’s the plan,” he said. “It’s always Arctic air to the Northeast in the winter, but a balancing act. If you do decide to close, that creates that this year’s polar vortex “is particularly intense and a whole host of complications. It’s a big decision and expansive” and has caused dangerously low wind chill we don’t want to have to do that, but that’s always temperatures in the Midwest and elsewhere. balanced with a desire for safety.” Many Cornell students were feeling bitter about President Martha E. Pollack makes the final call the prospect of trudging along icy sidewalks to class in on whether to close the University based on the rec- subzero temperatures. ommendation of a group of vice presidents including Burgess, as well as Cornell’s top lawyer, its police See COLD page 3 Sun City Editor

CAMERON POLLACK / SUN FILE PHOTO

Walk of snow | Cornell planned to stay open as of Thursday morning despite a wind chill warning from the National Weather Service.

NICHOLAS BOGEL-BURROUGHS / SUN CITY EDITOR

All TCAT Buses Free Today Due to Weather By NICHOLAS BOGEL-BURROUGHS Sun City Editor

Tompkins Consolidated Area Transit announced that the bus service will offer free rides for all routes on Thursday in response to a bitter wind chill that is expected to approach minus 30 degrees. The National Weather Service has placed Ithaca and much of Central New York under a wind chill warning until 6 p.m. Thursday, warning that the temperature and wind could cause frostbite in just 10 minutes. “TCAT is doing its part to make sure folks who happen to be out and about have an option to escape the elements by boarding a warm bus,” TCAT General Manager Scot Vanderpool said in a statement. Ducson Nguyen, a Second Ward alderperson who became chair of the TCAT board of directors earlier this month, said bus service is expected to operate as usual, but without the fares. “It’s obviously dangerous temperatures tonight and tomorrow,” Nguyen said. “TCAT wants to do everything it can to do to protect our community and provide a way for people to get around without having to walk or bike if that’s their only option.” The transportation agency’s assistant general manager encouraged riders to still use their Cornell IDs and day-based passes — which will not be charged — so that TCAT can collect ridership data. See TCAT page 3

Cornellians’ Research Weill Physicians Earn Most Among Cornell Employees Links Music to Weather By ANNE SNABES

Sun Assistant News Editor

By SHIVANI SANGHANI Sun Staff Writer

What are you listening to as you trek through the snowy campus in this weather? With Ithaca facing record-setting low temperatures, it’s likely that you are not blasting some rock n’ roll. Cornell researchers found that music choices vary based on weather, culture, age, gender and other factors. Rather than examine the emo-

tions people express or ordinarily feel, Prof. Michael Macy, sociology, and Minsu Park, grad, sought to investigate the emotions people seek to feel by studying their choices of music. These music choices reflect people’s emotional preferences, which are influenced by time of day and weather and also differ across age, gender, culture and geography, See MUSIC page 3

Physicians at Weill Cornell Medicine and University administrators receive the highest paychecks of all Cornell employees, while Ithaca-based professors average a much lower salary. While the top earner makes more than $7 million per year, the average pay for full professors in contract colleges is less than $150,000. A Sun review of the IRS tax filings found that the top three highest-paid Cornell employees in 2016 were all obstetrician-gynecologists, which differs from other Ivy League schools: Columbia and Yale’s highest earners were investment management administrators, while Brown’s included both the university’s president and investment

personnel. Cornell’s IRS tax return for 2016, or Form 990, lists the compensation of officers, directors, trustees, the five highest compensated employees,

certain former employees and “key employees.” See PAYCHECKS page 3

EMILY JACOBSSON / SUN GRAPHICS DESIGNER


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