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ATTEND A SUN RECRUITMENT MEETING — SEE PAGE 2 INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 136, No. 53

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2020

n

12 Pages – Free

ITHACA, NEW YORK

‘A brilliant scholar and a gracious leader’

Former C.U. President Rhodes Dies at 93

University’s ninth president oversaw increased diversity, led unprecedented fundraising success By MEGHNA MAHARISHI

ty and administrators on Rhodes’ lasting impact on Cornell. “It was a graciousness that included time After it was announced on Tuesday he spent chatting with my mom, when he that former Cornell President Frank encountered us at Sunday brunch at H.T. Rhodes died, scores of Banfi’s; that extended … to dayCornellians mourned the loss. to-day kindnesses that are too Cornell’s ninth president little in evidence in 2020,” died Monday night in Altschuler wrote. Bonita Springs, Florida. Regarded by many as He was 93. one of Cornell’s great“Frank Rhodes was a est presidents, Rhodes brilliant scholar and a served as the University’s gracious leader who was ninth president from not only deeply respect1977 to 1995 — maked, but truly loved by gening him one of the lonerations of Cornellians,” gest-serving presidents said President Martha E. at Cornell and in the Ivy Pollack in a University press League. Once Rhodes was release. inaugurated president, he dedGlenn Altschuler Ph.D. ’76, icated the rest of his life to the American studies and dean University. PRESIDENT RHODES of the School of Continuing In his 1977 inaugural Education and Summer Sessions, com- speech, Rhodes first spoke of this lifelong mented on the former president’s polite commitment to a crowd of 6,000 guests at demeanor on a condolences page — which See RHODES page 5 is filled with responses from alumni, faculSun Staff Writer

ABOVE: COURTESY OF CORNELL; INSET: JEFF EARICKSON / SUN FILE PHOTO; RIGHT: JACK FROST / SUN FILE PHOTO

A part of history | Above: President Rhodes stands on steps of the Great Wall of China in July 1980, part of a 10-member Cornell delegation seeking to re-establish ties with the mainland after the Chinese Revolution. Right: President Rhodes glares at Africana Center director James E. Turner after 200 students forcibly detained Rhodes and other trustees in the Johnson Museum of Art in April 1978. The students were protesting against a possible re-evaluation of the center’s status.

Klarman ’79 Cash Tied to Iowa Caucus Firefighters By KATHRYN STAMM Sun Staff Writer

With the final winner of the Iowa caucus still unconfirmed as of late Wednesday night, investigations into what went wrong have revealed a Cornell connection. In December, Seth Klarman ’79, the namesake of Klarman Hall, donated $1.5 million to Pacronym — one of the groups tied to an app that many have blamed for the missteps in the Iowa caucus — just over a month ago, according to the Federal Election Commission. As of Wednesday night with 97 percent of precincts reporting, Mayor Pete Buttigieg narrowly led the state-equivalent delegate

count with 26.2 percent, as Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) trailed behind at 26.1 percent. The Iowa caucus has been at the center of controversy regard-

ing the botched implementation of a vote-counting app, which delayed its results by days. While votes were supposed to be finalized by Monday night, JASON KOSKI / UNIVERSITY PHOTOGRAPHY

PAC-Man | Seth Klarman ’79 cuts a ribbon at the dedication ceremony for Klarman Hall in May 2016. Klarman donated $1.5 million to Pacronym, a group tied to the Iowa caucuses mishap.

a winner was not declared as of Wednesday night — causing many to blame an app the Iowa Democratic Party commissioned to tabulate the results. The app had not been previously tested on a statewide scale, and on the night of the caucuses, precinct officials confronted a wide variety of issues, including technical glitches, difficulties downloading it and even inability to log in. While officials could instead manually call in results by phone, an overwhelmed hotline led to what most political commentators widely called “unprecedented” disarray. The company that developed the fledgling app, Shadow, was See KLARMAN page 5

Save Woman From Gorge By SARAH SKINNER Sun Managing Editor

The Ithaca Fire Department rescued a woman from Six Mile Creek Gorge near First Dam at around 3 p.m. on Wednesday afternoon. The older woman had fallen down a 40-foot embankment, Ithaca Police Department Assistant Chief Thomas Basher said in a press release. She was See RESCUE page 5


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