INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880
The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 133, No. 85
MONDAY, MAY 8, 2017
!
ITHACA, NEW YORK
12 Pages – Free
News
Arts
Sports
Weather
Making a Run
Getting Paulitical
Moving Ahead
P.M. Showers HIGH: 48º LOW: 36º
A Cornell graduate is aiming to represent Collegetown and downtown Ithaca on the Tompkins County Legislature. | Page 3
Despite falling short of an Ivy championship, the Red has earned an at-large bid in the NCAA tournament. | Page 12
Lorenzo Benitez ’19 profiles rapper Paul Russell ’19, also known as Paulitics. | Page 7
Inside a Cornell Title IX Investigation Court documents expose a process previously hidden from public eye By DREW MUSTO Sun Senior Editor
Hours before the moment in 2015 that sparked a Cornell Title IX investigation and two lawsuits, Sally Roe and James Doe began their nights as many students do in college towns across the country, by leaving a fraternity house and venturing off campus to locate a party. The two students, whose real names The Sun is withholding, spent about an hour in Ithaca’s Collegetown before returning to the fraternity house — Doe’s — and receding to Doe’s bedroom alone. What happened next was the subject of a nearly five-monthlong Cornell Title IX Office investigation based largely on text messages, a friend who spoke to Roe later that night and a Title IX investigator’s assessment of each student’s credibility. The investiga-
tor’s ultimate decision that Doe should be suspended for at least a year was later overturned by the University’s highest appellate panel for Title IX investigations, and Doe is suing the University for what he says was a “fatally flawed” investigation. Cornell requires all parties to keep confidential anything they learn in the course of Title IX investigations, meaning the Title IX Office’s inner workings are rarely exposed to the public. Court documents from one of Doe’s two lawsuits give an inside look at how the University’s Title IX Office handled the complex case, shedding light on how at least one Title IX investigator came to a conclusion. Elizabeth McGrath, the Title IX investigator whose investigative report happened to become public record, attempted to handle a difficult charge: to find the truth between two irreconcilable narra-
Cold as vice |
OZIER MUHAMMAD / THE NEW YORK TIMES
Then Sen. Joe Biden campaigns for U.S. Vice President with supporters at an ice cream shop in Florida in 2008.
Cornell Dairy to Make Biden Memes Reality By NICHOLAS BOGEL-BURROUGHS Sun City Editor
Cornell Dairy is teaming up with the Cornell Convocation Committee to name an ice cream flavor after former vice president Joe Biden, who will speak at this year’s convocation on May
27. Biden is known for his love of the frozen treat, which has spawned a Tumblr page, countless internet memes and led to his donning aviator sunglasses and diving into a cone with Jimmy Fallon. “My name is Joe
Biden, and I love ice cream,” the 47th vice president declared in May of 2016. “You all think I'm kidding — I'm not. I eat more ice cream than the three other people you'd like to be with, all at once.” So when the See BIDEN page 3
tives. Both Doe and Roe agree that when they got back to Doe’s room, they began to kiss consensually. Their stories diverge from there, with Roe alleging that Doe took things too far by trying to unhook her bra despite her repeated demands that he not. Doe ignored her protests and became even more aggressive, Roe alleges, violently yanking her hair,
lacing his fingers around her neck and choking her for about five seconds. As a matter of self-defense, Roe says, she punched Doe’s genitals and left the room. Doe’s story
MICHAEL SUGUITAN / SUN STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Affel | University Title IX coordinator Sarah Affel presents at a Student Assembly meeting on Thursday, April 20.
See TITLE IX page 4
Grad-Only Housing Renovations Set for August 2018 Completion By ANNA DELWICHE Sun News Editor
Construction is underway at the future Maplewood Apartments complex after Cornell officials and developers symbolically broke ground at the site Friday afternoon. The complex will be exclusively available for Cornell graduate and professional students. The original Maplewood Apartments, built in 1989, was demolished last winter amid plans for reconstruction. The former complex had capacity for 360 beds, though was built of “poor quality” with an anticipated “short life span,” Ithaca local Tessa Rudan ’89 previously told The Sun. Construction for the new complex is expected to be comCOURTESY OF EDR COLLEGIATE HOUSING
pleted in August 2018. The developer and manager of the site, Education Realty Trust (EdR), has led the redevelopment project with collaboration from the University. Nathaniel Rogers, grad, president of Cornell Graduate and Professional Student Assembly,
lauded the developer and the University for their inclusion of input from graduate students at the ceremony on Friday.
Beds and beyond | Buildings at the periphery of the site (located between Maple Avenue and Mitchell Street just outside the City of Ithaca’s east edge) will feature traditional designs reflecting their context (below), while those within the site will have a more contemporary look (inset).
“Graduate and professional students were invited to participate early in the design stage and set many of the original goals that made their way into the final plan,” Rogers said. “I want to especially thank Jeremy Thomas, Senior Director of Cornell Real Estate. Jeremy has done an excellent job of keeping graduate and professional students not just informed of what was going on, but has made us actual partners in this project.” Cornell currently has capacity for only four percent of its graduate and professional students on campus, forcing the rest to seek housing in Ithaca, according to a resolution passed by the GPSA in September. The new complex is expected to house 872 new beds in 442 units of apartments including studio units and one, two, three and four-bedroom apartments and townhouses, according to a presentation by Jeffrey ReSee MAPLEWOOD page 4