INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880
The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 136, No. 23
MONDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2019
n
12 Pages – Free
ITHACA, NEW YORK
News
Arts
Sports
Weather
New Home
Funny Campus
Cold Streak
Sunny And Humid
The Hindu Student Council moved into its first permanent space after 20 years.
Cornell hosted its first ever comedy festival over the weekend. Troupes came from across the Northeast. | Page 6
| Page 3
Cornell football lost its fourth straight game, a 21-20 home loss to Colgate. | Page 12
HIGH: 63º LOW: 50º
Protesters Disrupt Trustee-Council Summit Student environmentalists, social justice advocates demand financial divestment By JUSTINE KIM Sun Staff Writer
Students slammed their palms and posters against the windows of the Friday afternoon Board of Trustees meeting in Myron Taylor Hall, chanting, “We won’t rest ’til you divest!” Security guards had escorted the dissenters out of the room after their initial disruption of the meeting. At the conclusion of the meeting, the guards also blockaded the students from nearing the trustees as they exited. Hailing from Climate Justice Cornell, Students for Justice in Palestine, Uyghur Solidarity and the Islamic Alliance for Justice, the protesters urged Cornell leaders to divest from fossil fuel companies and re-evaluate their ties with top universities complicit in the Xinjiang Conflict and the conflict in Palestine along with corporate elites accused of exploiting migrant workers in Qatar. “The board of trustees doesn’t accurately represent the university well enough,” Nadia Viteck ’22, a member of Climate Justice Cornell, told The Sun in an interview. Viteck and other climate change activists wore bright orange and waved matching banners with the words “Fossil Free Endowment.” Max Greenburg ’22, president of the Cornell Jewish Voice for Peace and treasurer of Students and Justice in Palestine accused the Board of Trustees of working for the See PROTEST page 4
JUSTINE KIM / SUN STAFF WRITER
DANIEL RA / SUN STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Praise and pushback | Students from several advocacy groups demand justice and accountability of the Trustees as the group meets for its annual meeting. While President Martha Pollack listed accomplishments, students aired their grievances.
C.U. must ‘support’ diverse classes, not just admit them, says Pollack By TAMARA KAMIS Sun Staff Writer
Friday’s State of the Union address was an opportunity for President Pollack to redefine the University’s priorities, briefing the Statler Hall audience on the changes her administration has enacted since last year’s speech — a year that saw both scandals and lawsuits regarding admissions at Ivy League schools. “It’s not enough to admit a diverse class, we must also support them,” Pollack told the crowd, which featured members of the board of trustees, the council, alumni and the public. A main focus of this support was Cornell’s mental health resources, long a point of contention from students and advocacy groups.
“Cornell Health has developed a number of initiatives, including telehealth programs connecting Weill Cornell specialists with the Ithaca campus and a revamped mental health service that significantly expands both access and flexibility,” Pollack said. “Concurrently, we are conducting a campus-wide mental health review, with both internal and external assessments.” These changes were meaningful for some alumni, who described personal experiences with what they saw as Cornell’s failure to appropriately address mental health issues. “One area where [Cornell has] fallen short for decades, maybe even longer, is mental health,” said Mary Jones ’78. “I saw this when I was a resident advisor and the resources were See ADDRESS page 4
MICHELLE YANG / SUN STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
On tap | The new downtown CTB location will boast more beverage offerings, a patio and bright decor featuring multi-colored bottles.
Collegetown Bagels Prepares New Downtown Digs By JILL CROSBY Sun Staff Writer
Collegetown Bagels customers will soon have to walk an extra block downtown to get their coffee and Zabs order. The beloved restaurant’s downtown branch will move from the corner of N.
Aurora Street to the new City Centre Ithaca building opposite the east end of the Ithaca Commons. Gregor Brous, owner of Collegetown Bagels, said that he is aiming for “the end of the month” to open the new location at 301 E. State Street. Brous noted that they had
both push and pull motivations for migrating: the redevelopment of the Aurora Street corner and the coincidental construction of the new City Centre apartment building. The new location at 301 E. State Street is more accessible, Brous said. There are
more parking options available on the block, and the three loading zones around the store will allow customers and deliverers to quickly stop in, he said. “The visibility is strong coming from East Hill or South Hill, and it is right off the Ithaca Commons,” said
Brous. Prime visibility is one of the reasons behind the success of the Collegetown location, Alex Loane ’21, a former employee of the Cornell-adjacent branch, told The Sun. That location See CTB page 4