INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880
The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 137, No. 24
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2020
n
8 Pages – Free
ITHACA, NEW YORK
News
Science
Sports
Weather
Civic Duties
Water Shortage
Votes Are In
Scattered Showers
Students working the polls have filled the void left by older poll workers worried about COVID-19. | Page 3
Professors break down what Ithaca’s drought could mean for residents and the ecosystem. | Page 4
Cornell men’s hockey was ranked no. 6 in the nation by a USCHO pre-season poll. | Page 8
HIGH: 52º LOW: 42º
Midway Through Semester, Burnout Is Main Concern Students cite shortened fall break, Zoom fatigue everything is online,” Li said. “Especially [since] there’s so many technical difficulties all Even during a normal col- the time, so it’s hard to commulege semester, Cornell students nicate effectively with others.” struggle to take care of their Li said the difficulty of mental health, caught between communicating over Zoom endless projects, exams and negatively affected her level of papers. understanding, and as a result, Add in a global pandemic her grades. and the issue of mental health “Your grades go down. And gets even worse. The hybrid then you have to work even semester — part online, part harder and it becomes this in-person — has contributed to weird cycle of not understandrising stress and anxiety levels, ing what’s going on and having leading to an increasing number to spend more time [on your of students feeling burnt out. work],” Li said. For Jackson KeelAtkins main “Because of online teaching, it’s a lot concern’22,washis being overworked. harder to get information across to feels like [in] students when everything is online.” this“Itsemester, going to class isn’t what’s Erica Li ’24 taking up most of my time, it’s just According to Erica Li ’24, a the fact that professors are now lot of the stress she has felt so compensating for the lack of far this semester is due to her class with even more work,” online classes, which she said Keel-Atkins said. is preventing her from having a He attributed the increased manageable learning experience. workload to professors still get“Because of online teaching ting used to teaching online, it’s a lot harder to get informa- and as a result haven’t figured tion across to students when out how to properly structure By JULIA NAGEL Sun Contributor
the lecture material and due dates. “I have one class with a prelim, a project, and homework all due within three days of each other,” Keel-Atkins said. But the hybrid schedule did have some proponents. Rachel Bradley ’21 said that, for her, it is much easier to log onto Zoom than trek across campus to an in-person class. “I fall into the camp where having the option for online learning is actually better for me as I am not a morning person,” Bradley said. “I will almost always make it to class if all I have to do is log in to my laptop.” However, Bradley conceded that, even if online learning has provided some convenience, the pandemic has had significant, negative impacts on students’ mental health more broadly. Li said that more flexibility in grading could help to effectively address the mental health challenges that students are experiencing due to the stress of learning in a pandemic. “I’ve heard of other schools
Dropdeck Dropdeck
See BURNOUT page 3
Aspirants | Rep. Tom Reed (R-N.Y.), left, and Tracy Mitrano J.D. ’95, right.
Dueling Candidates Spar Over Policing By ELI PALLRAND Sun Contributor
The race for New York’s 23rd Congressional District turned to mudslinging last week as incumbent Rep. Tom Reed (R-NY) accused his opponent, Tracy Mitrano J.D. ’95, of running an “anti-police campaign,” despite Mitrano’s multiple assertions that she is a supporter of law enforcement and against defunding the police. This is the second election where Mitrano and Reed are facing off for the western New York congressional seat. The change in tone comes as protests against
police violence and, this weekend, protests in support of police, sweep Ithaca. The accusation came after revelations that an organizer with the Mitrano campaign posted the following on Instagram: “Fuck Tom Reed, fuck cops, fuck capitalism, fuck Trump.” Reed campaign communications director Abbey Daugherty called the comments “hateful and offensive” and claimed them as proof that “what truly motivates Mitrano [is]... a hatred of our law enforcement community and our capitalist system.” See CAMPAIGN page 2
Students Pick Up Poll Work Fill void left by lack of older poll workers By CONNOR GREENE
normally work the polls chose not to sign up this year because Traditionally, of concerns related to Election Day polls COVID-19. are staffed by brightIn their place, the eyed and smilcommissioner ing sixty, sevCornell “Especially with COVID, said enty and even students have eighty-some- young people can play a partly filled things. But this huge role in the election.” the gap left year, as this by seniors. He demographestimated 10 Odeya Rosenbrand ’22 ic remains the to 15 Cornell most susceptiundergraduates ble to the COVID-19 er of the Tompkins will be working the pandemic, younger County Board of polls this year –– siggenerations are step- Elections, told The nificantly up from ping up: College stu- Sun that around years past, when he dents are helping to half of the older poll fill the poll worker workers who would See POLLS page 3 Sun Contributor
ANANT SRIRAM / SUN FILE PHOTO
Overworked | Students contend with online classes in addition to the stress normally brought by school.
void. And Tompkins County, is no exception. Stephen Dewitt, co-commission-