05-07-19 entire issue hi res

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INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 135, No. 87

TUESDAY, MAY 7, 2019

n

16 Pages – Free

ITHACA, NEW YORK

Summertime Sadness

Arts

Sports

Weather

The Syncophators

What place does the jazz band have in a modern college environment?

Year in Review

Today, The Sun suspends publication for the summer. Visit cornellsun.com periodically until we return in the fall.

Occasional Rain Showers

Top 25: Matt Morgan and Marlène Boissannault headline The Sun’s Top 25 senior athletes of 2019. | Page 16

| Page 9

HIGH: 55º F LOW: 38º F

Softball Players Claim Mistreatment the infielder told anyone that she had been forced to stay in the game, she’d be benched for the rest of the season. Murray said she felt “scared” and “helpless.” After the first tournament of her junior season, After Sarah Murray ’20 stole second base in a game against Akron in March 2017, she knew that Murray quit the team. She is one of seven current and former Cornell softball players who something had gone wrong. Murray had said that Farlow has engaged in a pattern collided with the opposing shortstop of mistreatment during her four years as and immediately didn’t feel right. head coach, including neglecting estab“You’re OK, right?” her coach asked. lished concussion protocols, mishandling Murray felt she had no choice but to other injuries and mental health issues. say yes. She stayed in the game despite Meanwhile, Cornell didn’t do anything, having suffered a concussion. they said. After the game, the first of a douJeremy Hartigan, a Cornell Athletics bleheader, Murray found out that the spokesperson, said that Farlow declined team’s trainer at the time, Becky Guzzo, to comment. wanted to sideline her. However, FARLOW ’97 “I have a strong sense of what is going according to Murray, head coach Julie on with softball, and am aware that some Farlow ’97 told Guzzo — a graduate assistant athletic trainer — that she couldn’t pull softball players are not happy with their team experience and are critical of the coaches and the departMurray from the game. Murray said Farlow, then in her second year as ment,” Andy Noel, director of athletics, wrote in a head coach, told Murray, then a freshman, that if statement to The Sun. By DYLAN McDEVITT and RAPHY GENDLER Sun Senior Writer and Sun Sports Editor

CAMERON POLLACK / SUN FILE PHOTO

Hard ball | Seven current and former Cornell softball players have alleged a pattern of mistreatment under current head coach Julie Farlow ’97 during her four year tenure.

The statement continues: “The coaches and student-athletes have a lot of work to do to meet their long-term goals, and I’m on board with those goals. See SOFTBALL page 4

Amidst Finals, Ramadan Poses Challenges To Muslims Balancing Religion With Exams By SOPHIE ARZUMANOV Sun Staff Writer

SABRINA XIE / SUN DESIGN EDITOR

Balooning loans| As University-issued grant aid has stagnated in recent years, students have been forced to take on more — and bigger — student loans.

Swelling Debt Overwhelms Less aid has left students saddled with heavy loans By JOSH GIRSKY Sun Senior Writer

Eddy Medina ’17 was crying in the financial aid office in the fall of his junior year. He couldn’t pay his tuition, his family didn’t have the credit to take out more loans and he was about to be withdrawn from the University. He was sitting with a financial aid counselor, and he had just asked her “what the hell do I do now?” He asked if he should take time off from school to work and make more money, but that wouldn’t work, as it would increase his income, and that would have lowered his financial aid package. The counselor asked if he had any family who

could help him pay for college, but that option wasn’t immediately available to him either. The counselor started tearing up too. She told him she was sorry, and that there was nothing she could do. Medina said his family’s socioeconomic status is “as middle class as middle class gets.” After being withdrawn from the ILR School in the winter of his junior year for failure to pay his tuition, he was able to return in time for spring semester by securing a loan with the help of his grandmother, who cosigned despite the fact that she cannot speak English. See DEBT page 5

For the Muslim community at Cornell this year, this year’s final weeks will be more complicated than usual. For only the second time since 1989, Ramadan — a month-long holy period that requires adherents to avoid eating and drinking from sunrise to sunset — will coincide with the exam period. This year’s Ramadan will begin on the evening of Sunday, May 5, and will end the evening of Tuesday, June 4. In order to accommodate the Muslim community, some dining halls will have extended hours until 9 p.m. This schedule will be in effect until May 21 for Appel’s North Star Dining Room and May 17 for the Robert Purcell Marketplace Eatery and Cook House Dining Room. These dining halls will also offer take-out con-

tainers and breakfast boxes for those who wish to eat after 9 p.m., or in the early morning hours before sunrise. However, because Muslims break their fast at sunset, this can sometimes occur during a student’s evening final or affect their ability to concentrate when studying. “Having to wake up at 3:30 a.m. everyday to eat before the sun rises is challenging especially because it makes it hard to study and concentrate later,” said Malikul Muhamad ’20. “It’s really challenging to find time to study for finals and work on projects while also finding time to worship.” At the same time, while The New York State Education Law §224-A requires facSee RAMADAN page 5

THE CORNELL DAILY SUN GUIDE TO SLOPE DAY 2019 !appy " lope#ay $ve! As per recent tradition, Slope Day will be held the day after classes end to celebrate the end of the academic year. Free Breakfast

Free breakfast sandwiches and fruit will be served at Collegetown and North Campus from 8:30 - 10:30 a.m. Wristbands

If you have not already obtained your Slope Day wristband, you must pick one up today with a Cornell or government-issued ID. Music

Cousin Stizz and Ezi will open the concert, followed by Steve Aoki. Weather

Expect cloudy skies and chilly temperatures.

Schedule: Gates Open: 11 a.m. Slope Fest On Ho Plaza: 11 a.m. - 4 p.m. Concert Begins: Noon


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