03-05-19 entire issue hi res

Page 1

INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 135, No. 63

TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 2019

n

12 Pages – Free

ITHACA, NEW YORK

News

News

News

Weather

China's Energy

Necessary Hip-Hop

Moving On

Snow Showers

Energy policies meant to decrease energy use did the opposite.

Men's basketball tourney hopes slipping away; baseball in full swing.

Drip: Gunna’s newest album hits hard.

| Page 3

| Page 7

Runway | A

MICHAEL WENYE LI / SUN SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER

model strides down the runway at CFC’s 2018 fashion show.

| Page 12

HIGH: 22º LOW: 7º

Cornellians Participate in ‘Spring Cleaning’

Pop-up thrift shop in Willard Straight Hall promotes sustainable, affordable fashion for warmer weather By CHANTAL RAGUIN and AMANDA H. CRONIN Sun Contributor and Sun Assistant News Editor

Behind the Scenes of CFC Fashion Show

One show, months of preparations By JOHNATHAN STIMPSON and ROCHELLE LI Sun News Editors

Cornell Fashion Collective’s annual fashion show is the club’s signature event, celebrating fashion, creativity and design. But behind the scenes, the fashion show represents the culmination of months of labor, from initial planning over the summer to last-minute finishes this week. The show is one of the University’s most unique events: Cornell is the only of its peers to offer a formal fashion major See SHOW page 4 MICHAEL WENYE LI / SUN SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER

Vintage jeans, handmade jewelry and soaps were just a small sampling of the wares on sale yesterday at Spring Cleaning, Cornell Thrift’s pop-up store in Willard Straight Hall. With over 1,500 RSVP’s on Facebook and 40 participating vendors, student shoppers flocked to Spring Cleaning to peruse second-hand garments and try on potential purchases in blue tent fitting rooms. The event was a collaboration between three student-led sustainable fashion initiatives: Thrift Reuse Upcycle, KAN Supply and Cornell Thrift, who aimed to make the transition to spring sustainable through thrifting. “A lot of students are getting rid of items they don’t want anymore,” Cornell Thrift Executive

Director Megan Hayden ’19 told The Sun. “The idea of this market is to keep those things in circulation.” The Spring Cleaning event has been in the works since December, starting as a conversation between Cornell Thrift and KAN Supply. The pair then added Miranda Kasher ’19, owner of Thrift Reuse Upcycle, an Instagram-based thrift store. Kasher originally started her shop in January to clean out her closet, but soon found herself part of growing movement for sustainable fashion. “I can’t go a day without being followed by another thrift store,” she said of her Instagram boutique. “With the advent of technology, we are able See THRIFT page 5

YISU ZHENG / SUN STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Pop-up shop | Spring Cleaning attendees browse garments at the pop-up thrift shop in Willard Straight Hall, held in the Memorial Room.

Pollack Op-Ed Slams Immigration Laws By AMINA KILPATRICK Sun News Editor

Walk of fashion | A model walks down the runway at CFC’s 2018 fashion show.

On Monday, President Martha E. Pollack penned an Op-Ed for CNN about the state of higher education, arguing that the sinking number of international students at American institutions of higher learning — spurred by an increasingly hostile federal government — is a major loss for the United States. “On America's campuses, a tightening net of government regulations is increasingly excluding some of

Office, an increase of six percentage points from 2008, when international students represented 16.57 percent of the total enrollment. In an inter“On America’s campuses, a tightening view with The Sun in May, Jason C. net of government regulations is Locke, Cornell’s increasingly excluding some of the young interim vice provost for enrollment, said minds our country needs most.” the university “conPresident Martha E. Pollack tinues to be concerned” that increasPollack made a stateIn 2017, interna- ing regulations might ment announcing the tional students made dissuade international amicus brief drafted by up 22.04 percent of students from apply33 institutions of high- Cornell’s total enroll- ing to and enrolling at er learning, including ment, according to Cornell. Cornell, which argued the International that “travel ban harms Students and Scholars See OP-ED page 5 the young minds our country needs most — a trend that endangers our ability as a nation to innovate and compete,” Pollack said. In June 2018,

American higher education.” In the statement, Pollack said she would do everything she can to support the “global community” at Cornell.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.