INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880
The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 136, No. 3
FRIDAY, AUGUST 30, 2019
n
ITHACA, NEW YORK
12 Pages – Free
News
Arts
Sports
Weather
U.N. Millennium Fellows
Changing Narratives
Women’s Soccer Looks Ahead
Cloudy
15 Cornell students were chosen as U.N. Millennium Fellows and will work on a development project. | Page 3
Andrea Yang ’20 talks about how Taylor Swift uses the attacks against her to her advantage. | Page 6
Women’s Soccer hopes to improve over last season's performance. | Page 12
HIGH: 78º LOW: 52º
Dining Replaces Pepsi With Bubly By CAROLINE JOHNSON Sun Staff Writer
Fizz, but no flavor you ask? That’s because Pepsi products have been replaced with Bubbly sparkling water in all of Cornell’s dining halls, in an attempt to promote a healthier environment on Cornell’s campus. The driving force for this change was the Menus of Change initiative, whose mission is “to realize a long-term, practical vision integrating optimal nutrition and public health ... and social responsibility concerns within the foodservice industry,” according to its website. Starting this semester, all “sweetened Pepsi products” have been removed from the dining See DRINKS page 4
BORIS TSANG / SUN PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR
Underage drinking | The New York State Liquor Authority conducted an undercover sting operation — including at Sam’s Wines and Spirits, seen here — to address the sale of alcohol to underage individuals.
Local Firms Busted for Underage Alcohol Sales
State Liquor Authority conducted undercover sting that exposed 10 establishments By ANGELA LI Sun Staff Writer
BORIS TSANG / SUN PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR
Sweet changes | Cornell Dining has replaced Pepsi products with Bubly in the all-you-care-to-eat eateries.
Three Ithaca businesses were caught selling alcohol to underage customers in an undercover sting operation conducted by the New York State Liquor Authority on Friday, July 27. SLA enforcement personnel and an undercover decoy visited ten locations in Tompkins and
Steuben Counties. According to an SLA press release, the decoy was able to purchase alcohol at seven locations, including Sam’s Wine and Spirits, Ithaca Ale House, and Ithaca Marriott Downtown on the Commons. The Commons Market was the only Ithaca location that refused to sell alcohol to the underage agent. Crowley said these sting operations typically occur every week, each
targeting randomly selected locations in different counties. The undercover decoys posing as customers are usually underage volunteers recruited from local colleges or criminal justice programs. Aside from routine checks, if the SLA gets a referral from the local police department or credible complaints of underage sales at a certain See ALCOHOL page 4
Cornell ‘Uncooperative’ in Stopping Confederate Flag Sales, Group Says
Such flags are sold at University sponsored state fairs By ALEX HALE Sun Staff Writer
The Confederacy was dissolved over 150 years ago at the end of the Civil War, but its flag is still sold and displayed at state fairs across New York. Fair for All — a group trying to eliminate Confederate flags from these fairs — finds Cornell’s help in doing so “disappointing,” according to leading member Krisy Gashler. Seen by many as a symbol of racism and the legacy of slavery, the flag of the Confederacy can be found at multiple county fairs across the state. Fair for All is trying to convince these fairs to change their policies and ban what they call hate symbols from their grounds. The group has called on Cornell University and Cornell’s Cooperative Extension to also condemn these sales, as
Cooperative Extension sponsors a number of New York State county fairs. So far, Fair for All has encountered fewer successes than it desires from the Cornell, though President Martha Pollack has stated that the University does not control the extension’s work. What Is Fair for All?
Founded in 2017, Fair for All was modeled after a group in Delaware County appalled by the display and sale of Confederate flags by vendors at their county’s fair the year prior. They created the group to pressure the fair to create a policy banning both the sale and the display of the flag. Now, organizers have expanded the effort towards all fairs in the state, including Trumansburg Fair, which represents Tompkins County. See FLAGS page 4
COURTESY OF CHRISTINA HUNT WOOD
Confederacy remnants | The organization Fair For All has deemed Cornell ‘uncooperative’ in halting the sales of Confederate flags at State fairs sponsored by Cornell.