09-13-21

Page 1

INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 138, No. 8

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2021

n

8 Pages – Free

ITHACA, NEW YORK

News

Arts

Sports

Weather

New Year Celebrations

Step Into the Sun

Football Season

Partly Cloudy

Cornell Jewish communities celebrate Rosh Hashanah in on- and off-campus events. | Page 3

Dear Evan Hansen is a must-see film, writes Aditi Hukerikar ’23.

Cornell football gears up for a new season, this year with fifth-year students.

| Page 5

| Page 8

HIGH: 77º LOW: 62º

Hannah-Jones Talks on 1619 Project, Democracy By KAYLA RIGGS Sun Assistant News Editor

TING TING CHEN / SUN CONTRIBUTOR

Tabling | New and old students gather on the Arts Quad this weekend to talk to more than 900 clubs and organizations during ClubFest.

ClubFest Returns in Person Following One Year Online Clubs hope to attract potential new members at Arts Quad event By SARAH YOUNG Sun Staff Writer

After a year of mostly virtual club activities at Cornell, many of the University’s clubs set up tables around the Arts Quad this weekend to attract potential new members during ClubFest. During the two-day event, students were able to talk to club members in person, view more than 900 student organizations and weigh what clubs they might want to join.

After last year’s online ClubFest, in-person tabling took on a new form again this year, as the event normally packs students into Barton Hall to peruse what Cornell has to offer. First-years and upperclassmen alike swarmed the Arts Quad, eager to make up on lost time during the online school year and find their communities on campus. Club leadership distributed brightly colored quarter cards, hoping to fill the holes left by graduated

Cornellians Ring In Jewish New Year

See CLUBFEST page 3

Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Nikole Hannah-Jones spoke to a socially-distanced audience in Rhodes-Rawlings Auditorium Thursday night for the annual Kops Freedom of the Press lecture, discussing her award-winning 1619 Project, race and American history. The lecture, which was also live streamed, lasted for nearly two hours, during which Cornellians were given the opportunity to listen to HannahJones and participate in a Q&A following her speech. The event began with a land acknowledgement and the introduction of Prof. Jamila Michener, government, and Prof. Derrick Spires, literatures in English –– both of whom mediated the Q&A portion of the event –– and, of course, HannahJones. Hannah-Jones is a staff writer at The New York Times Magazine who investigates racial injustice and civil rights. In her 19-year career, she’s been awarded over 50 national accolades for her work. In recent years, she is most well known for her work on the 1619 Project, an initiative launched on the 400th anniversary of the beginning of American slavery that “aims to reframe the country’s history by placing the consequences of slavery and the contributions of Black Americans at the very center of our national narrative,” according to its website.

This project was a focal point in her lecture, especially because it has brought an onslaught of backlash from critics and conservative news sources since its publication. Former President Donald Trump released a rebuttal to her project –– entitled the 1776 Commission, which did not include a single historian –– on Martin Luther King Jr. Day this past January. The National Association of

ASHLEY RAMYNKE / SUN CONTRIBUTOR

Lecture | Nikole Hannah-Jones speaks to Cornellians on Sept. 9.

Scholars, a conservative advocacy group, launched a campaign to revoke the Pulitzer Prize awarded to Hannah-Jones in 2020, and, in May, she was denied tenure at the University of North Carolina amid backlash she received due to the See HANNAH-JONES page 3

Remembrance

Rosh Hashanah events create sense of community By VEE CIPPERMAN Sun News Editor

The last days of summer are a time for fresh starts: a new semester, a new season and a New Year for Cornell’s Jewish communities. Students celebrated Rosh Hashanah from the evening of Sept. 6 though Sept. 8 with services, meals and gatherings — all slightly modified to fit the ongoing pandemic, but much closer to tradition than last year’s. “I wasn’t allowed on campus for close to 500 days because of COVID-19,” said Rabbi Ari Weiss, executive director of Cornell Hillel. “It was just great to be able to celebrate again with

a large community.” Rosh Hashanah occurs annually as part of the Jewish High Holy Days or Yamim Noraim (“Days of Awe”). Jewish people put the old year to rest and celebrate new beginnings with a variety of traditions, including communal meals and the sounding of the shofar, a ram’s horn carved into an instrument. This Rosh Hashanah marked the year 5782 in the Jewish calendar. “[The High Holidays] serve as the focal point of the year, where people come together,” Weiss said. Sophia Bergen ’23, co-gabbai See ROSH HASHANAH page 3

BEN PARKER / SUN SENIOR EDITOR

On Sept. 11, 2021, events across Cornell’s campus memorialized the 20th anniversary of 9/11. Above, President Martha Pollack on Saturday honors the Chi Psi brothers who lost their lives during the attacks.


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.