10 11 18 entire issue hi res

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INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 135, No. 22

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2018

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16 Pages – Free

ITHACA, NEW YORK

News

Arts

Sports

Weather

Market Fresh

Apolitical

Three in a Row?

Scattered Thunderstorms

Cornell Dining will now run a Straight From the Market space on the fourth floor of Willard Straight Hall. | Page 3

Andrea Yang ’20 discusses Kanye’s recent Saturday Night Live antics.

Cornell looks to continue its momentum when it faces off against No. 17 Colgate this Saturday. | Page 16

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HIGH: 73˚ LOW: 45˚

Colvin Assumes Interim Dean Role By PARIS GHAZI

Sun Assistant News Editor

Prof. Alexander Colvin Ph.D. ’99, associate dean for academic affairs, diversity, and faculty development and Martin F. Scheinman Professor of Conflict Resolution, has been named the interim dean of the School of Labor and Industrial Relations after the former dean Prof. Kevin Hallock became the new leader of the SC Johnson College of Business. Colvin, who joined the ILR school in 2008, assumed the position on Tuesday, Oct. 9, and will serve as dean until a new one is appointed. The PROF. COLVIN University will begin searching candidates for the position immediately, Provost Michael Kotlikoff said. “I am very excited to be taking on the new role leading the ILR School,” Colvin said to The Sun in an email. “The School is a great place with wonderful faculty, staff, students, and alumni, who I look forward to working with. It embodies the best of Cornell’s research excellence, education that bridges traditional fields in exciting collaborations, and commitment to our public outreach mission.” Before taking on this role, Colvin contributed to Cornell both through his teaching, which focuses on employment dispute resolutions, and his research on employment arbitration and labor and employment law changes in Australia, Germany, Italy and the United States, according to the ILR website. “Alex is extremely smart, has the highest standards, is balanced and loves ILR. I have been lucky to work very closely with him for the last See DEAN page 5

COURTESY OF CORNELL UNIVERSITY

Portal perks | President Martha E. Pollack visits the portal, which has now had about 1,500 visits, including Ithaca Mayor Myrick ’09.

Portal Attracts Over One Thousand Visitors

Ithaca Mayor Svante Myrick ’09, President Pollack observe installation By ANU SUBRAMANIAM Sun News Editor

Since its installation in mid-August, the portal residing on the Arts Quad has been visited about 1,500 times. Visitors include Ithaca Mayor, Svante Myrick ’09 and, now, President Martha E. Pollack. Myrick’s Sept. 27 visit, previously reported on by The Sun, focused on U.S. international relations during the Trump presidency with political consultant Luis Daniel Perez Vazquez. Pollack followed up on Oct. 5 with Katherine

McComas, vice provost for engagement and land-grant affairs, and Wendy Wolfrod, vice provost for international affairs. The three spoke with

has taught about 150 students since its opening. Pollack studied computer science in school and when she was younger, she said that

“I’m actually organizing a coding boot camp for high school kids in Ghana. My friend and I did it last winter break.” Samuel Opoku-Agyemang ’19 representatives from Code to Inspire, an organization in Herat, Afghanistan. The organization focuses its efforts on teaching girls to code, develop websites and make apps and

Leaning and learning

“there were almost no women in the field. She said a lot has changed since then. “Here at Cornell, engineering is about 50 percent women, and in comput-

er science about a third are women,” Pollack told the Cornell Chronicle, which is run by the University. Students have also taken advantage of the portal. After Pollack’s conversation about coding, Samuel OpokuAgyemang ’19 joined the conversation, according to the University. “I’m actually organizing a coding boot camp for high school kids in Ghana,” he said. “My friend and I did it last winter break. We are going back this December, and we have two Cornell proSee PORTAL page 5

APA Awards Psychology Prof By EMMA ROSENBAUM Sun Contributor

MICHAEL WENYE LI / SUN PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

Students take advantage of the warm fall weather and use the space around the A.D. White statue on the Arts Quad to study and relax.

Prof. Charles Brainerd, human development, has been awarded the highest honor in the field of developmental psychology: the American Psychological Association’s G. Stanley Hall award. He will receive this award at the APA’s annual convention in August 2019. The G. Stanley Hall award is given to a single individual who has made “distinguished contributions to developmental psycholo-

gy, including contributions in research, student training, and other scholarly endeavors,” according to the

PROF. BRAINERD

APA website. The award’s evaluations are based on the scientific merit

of the individual’s work, the importance of this work for opening up new empirical or theoretical areas of development psychology and the importance of the individual’s work in linking developmental psychology with issues confronting the larger society or with other disciplines, according to the website. Brainerd’s research focuses on human cognition. His research has been published in the Journal of See BRAINERD page 5


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