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The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 136, No. 6
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2019
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12 Pages – Free
ITHACA, NEW YORK
News
Arts
Sports
Weather
Temple of Zeus Mugs
Indie Books
Field Hockey
Mostly Cloudy HIGH: 70º LOW: 51º
Temple of Zeus Cafe has made reusable cups the default option.
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Cornell women's field hockey faces early season victories.
Andrea Yang '20 writes about the dilemma she has when ordering books from large retailers. | Page 7
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First Cohort of LGBTQ+ Program House Residents Find Community in the Hall By ANGELA LI Sun Staff Writer
BORIS TSANG / SUN PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR
Dynamic display | The Big Red Bands performs Saturday on the Ithaca Commons during C.U. Downtown, an event drawing first-years and returning students from the hill.
4th Annual C.U. Downtown Features Free Food, Performers By ALEC GIUFURTA Sun Staff Writer
Cornellians descended into the Ithaca Commons Saturday for the fourth annual C.U. Downtown. Saturday’s festivities were a foray for students into exploring downtown Ithaca, featuring performances from Cornell organizations, free doughnuts and plenty of give-away silicone phone wallets. C.U. Downtown, organized in partnership between Cornell’s Tatkon Center and the Downtown Ithaca Alliance, was started in 2016 with the aim of bridging Cornell’s campus and the city. This weekend, local business owners were outside greeting students, with some offering discounts. Cornell offices and TCAT also set up tents with give-away items and information for new students.
For many first-year students, Saturday was their first time venturing downtown. “I just wanted to explore,” Anthony Ma ’23 told The Sun. This was his first time in the Commons since moving into Cornell three weeks ago. Kristiana Thelen, outreach coordinator for the Downtown Ithaca Alliance,
said that the goal of the event was to welcome students back to Ithaca. “We really want [the Commons] to feel like their living room,” she said. “I really like this little walking street. It’s like Europe with its charm,” Jassa ChangWeinberg ’23 said, admiring
This fall, a quarter-century of LGBTQ+ activism on campus finally came to fruition with the opening of Loving House in Mews Hall. More than 25 years after the initial proposal for a LGBTQ+ program house was vetoed by the University in 1993, Loving House opened its doors this semester as Cornell’s LGBTQ+ Living Learning Unit. Located on the first floor east side of Mews Hall on North Campus, the program house accommodates 30 undergraduate residents of all class years and aims to “embrace honest and frank dialogues” about many aspects of LGBTQ+ identities as well as “cross-cultural understanding and the intersections of identity,” according to its Living @ Cornell website. Though the semester has only recently begun, the residents of Loving House have already formed
By KATHRYN STAMM Sun Staff Writer
MICHELLE ZHIQING / SUN STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
town experience, including the concert shown above.
See LOVING page 5
COURTESY OF CATHERINE CARTER
Loving house | This poster hangs in the halls of Loving House, the first LGBTQ+ centered program house at Cornell.
‘You’re My First’: Students Share Hometown Pride, Misconceptions
See DOWNTOWN page 5
Colorful moves | First-years flock to the Commons for the down-
strong bonds as a community. “Part of what we did for our move-in process is we actually moved in a week early, so we could do different community events,” said resident Catherine Carter ’22. Those events ranged from social gatherings with movies and ice
While students from Westchester have 679 peers from their county at Cornell, some students have fewer than 100 from their whole state. From Kansas to North Dakota to Vermont,
current students shared their experiences in hailing from a state which encompasses fewer than 1 percent of the Cornell undergraduate population. These students expressed similarities in facing lots of weird misconceptions, being excited to meet other
students from their states and finding new pride in their home states. “They think cowboy and they picture this Wild West with gun fights and saloons,” Luke Meyer ’22 said about being See STATES page 4
‘Light in All Senses’ Renovated Mui Ho Fine Arts Library Opens Doors By SAMANTHA STERN Sun Staff Writer
When students in the College of Architecture, Art, and Planning returned to campus this fall, they were greeted with a grand addition to their historic Rand Hall — the completion of the new
Mui Ho Fine Arts Library. The new space, located on the top floors of the hall, houses approximately 100,000 volumes of fine arts, design and urban planning materials as well as new spaces for research, computing, instruction and studying, according to an AAP press release.
The vast collection of books, held in three levels of stacks, is suspended in the center of the library to create a floating appearance. Bonna Boettcher, the Director of the Olin, Uris, Music and Fine Arts Libraries, said this allows the library to be described in just one word: “light.”
“Light in all senses: The book stacks float and are permeable to light and air; the study desks and counter appear to float; the windows are large and the light is bright,” said Boettcher in an email to the Sun. Embed photo here The space was designed by
a Cornellian — Wolfgang Tschapeller, M.Arch ’87. According to the college’s website, the aim of the project was to “create a space in which bodies intermingle with books but are also surrounded by digital See LIBRARY page 6