10-26-20 entire issue hi res.

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INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 137, No. 23

MONDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2020

n

8 Pages – Free

ITHACA, NEW YORK

News

Arts

Sports

Weather

Back to Campus

One Minute Friends

New Leadership

Cool And Rainy

Students who left campus and returned detail their re-entry quarantine process. | Page 3

Ramya Yandavia ’21 finds consolation in fictional friends.

It’s still unclear if they’ll play this season, but Cornell men’s hockey team named its captains for 2020-21. | Page 8

| Page 4

HIGH: 58º LOW: 43º

Protest Confronts Back the Blue Rally By SEAN O’CONNELL, ALEC GIUFURTA and MILO GRINGLAS Sun News Editor, Sun Senior Editor and Sun Contributor

Black-clad counterprotesters filled the Ithaca Commons Saturday, toting signs and chanting slogans of “Black Lives Matter” in response to a Back the Blue rally scheduled later that afternoon. By 2 p.m., a black American flag with a blue stripe — the “Blue Lives Matter” symbol — had been unfurled in front of around 50 demonstrators on the west side of the Commons; the rally had begun. On the other side of the Commons, the number of counterprotesters in the competing demonstration swelled to fill the Bernie Milton pavilion since beginning to filter in at 11 a.m., the original intended location for the Back the Blue rally.

TOP AND BOTTOM: BORIS TSANG / SUN PHOTO EDITOR; MIDDLE: BEN PARKER / SUN ASSISTANT PHOTO EDITOR

Intense emotions| Top: A group of Back the Blue ralliers. Bottom: A group of counterprotesters. Middle: The two sides face off on the Ithaca Commons.

But by 2:45 p.m., tensions escalated as Back the Blue rally-goers marched down the Commons to confront the approximately 250 person Black Lives Matter protest. “Where we are right now is almost a state of soft civil war,” said Rocco Lucente, the organizer of the Back the Blue rally, to the crowd holding American flags and “Blue Lives Matter” signs at the west end of the Commons. The clash ended by 4:30 p.m, leaving only one Back the Blue member — the only one of the group who actually resides in Ithaca, according to him. “This is my home,” he said to protesters telling him to go home. There were many police officers present at the protest —— officers covered street corners, blanketed the Commons and perched themselves on overlooking rooftops. Black Lives Matter protesters directed their chants toward the group of Back the Blue supporters. This was the strategy from the outset, according to Cornell Abolitionist Revolutionary Society organizer See PROTEST page 2

Kerry to Speak Virtually With Cornellians By ALEX HALE Sun News Editor

Five days before the Presidential election, Cornell students will get the opportunity to ask questions to former Democratic nominee John Kerry. Kerry — the runner-up in the 2004 presidential election and the Secretary of State under President Barack Obama — will speak to the Cornell community in a Zoom

event on Thursday at 5 p.m. Titled “A Conversation with John Kerry 68th Secretary of State (2013-2017),” the event is organized by the Institute of Politics and Global Affairs, and is sponsored by the government and history departments. The event is also hosted as a part of the Belnick Family LaFeber/ Lowi Presidential Forum, which takes place leading up to presidential elections. Named in honor

of Profs. Walter LeFeber, history, and Ted Low, government, the forum aims to inform students about major political issues facing the United States. First, there will be a discussion between Kerry and moderator Steve Israel, a former Congressman and head of Cornell’s politics institute. Then, the floor will open up to students’ questions for the former Secretary of State. Kerry grew up in Massachusetts

and attended Yale University for his undergraduate degree in political science in 1966. He then joined the Navy, serving for four years. He would go on to attend Boston College Law School, graduating in 1976. After losing a race for a spot in the House of Representatives in 1972, Kerry went into law. He practiced for ten years until he won See KERRY page 3

SEN. KERRY


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10-26-20 entire issue hi res. by The Cornell Daily Sun - Issuu