11-08-21 entire issue hi res

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INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 138, No. 31

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2021

n

8 Pages – Free

ITHACA, NEW YORK

Bomb Threats Hit Central Campus Cornellians face uncertain Sunday before threats found ‘not credible’ By MADELINE ROSENBERG and ANIL OZA Sun Managing Editor and Sun Assistant Managing Editor

Cornellians were bombarded with a combined 22 alerts — over text, email and phone — throughout Sunday afternoon, urging students to evacuate Central Campus following a bomb threat that authorities found “not credible.” An hour and a half following the first alert — when Cornellians, shocked and panicked, scrambled home — the University confirmed that the earlier calls to evacuate and shelter in place on Central Campus were due to bomb threats. ANIL OZA / SUN ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITOR

Central campus | Goldwin Smith Hall,

‘Avoid the Arts Quad’: Five Hours, Seven CornellALERTs

The first alert notified the campus community to avoid the Arts Quad Kennedy Hall, the Law School and Upson Hall and Goldwin Smith Hall, adding were the four buildings police identified as that those in the area should shelter under bomb threats on Sunday. in place, offering no explanation. Before sending the official CornellALERT at 1:57 p.m., the University sent two blank crime alerts, with the subject line “Crime Alert - [INSERT subject here].” A frantic second alert arrived just 15 minutes later in all caps, urging Cornellians to evacuate and avoid the Law School, Goldwin Smith Hall, Upson Hall and Kennedy Hall: “PLEASE DO NOT CALL THE CORNELL POLICE UNLESS YOU HAVE AN EMERGENCY,” the text alert read. By 3 p.m., the University told students, faculty and staff once again to avoid Central Campus and to evacuate areas in or nearby the four buildings. Police blocked off Feeney Way and multiple other sidewalks with caution tape, and stationed cars from multiple statewide agencies across Central Campus. In Sunday evening campus-wide email, Joel Malina, vice president for University relations, clarified that Tompkins County 911 received an anonymous call from someone threatening with automatic weapons and explosives just before 2 p.m. Authorities from Cornell University Police Department immediately responded, later joined by the Ithaca Police Department, the Tompkins County Sheriff’s Office, Cortland Police Department, SUNY Cortland Police, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and New York State Police, according to Malina. About an hour and a half after the first alert Cornell officially said the evacuations were due to bomb threats at 3:23 p.m. By approximately 4:06 p.m., the latest

CornellALERT notified the Ithaca campus that Cornell police, along with other law enforcement agencies, were investigating the bomb threat — and by 5:30 p.m., law enforcement agencies were sweeping buildings, as Cornellians awaited updates on when they could leave shelter. Five and a half hours later, the seventh and final CornellALERT announced that law enforcement found no credible threats after concluding a search of the Ithaca campus — saying that “it is safe to resume all normal activities.” University Messages Sow Shock, Confusion Across Campus

For the hour and a half after the first alert, rumors swirled online and among Cornellians huddled together — without further information that the evacuations were due to a bomb threat. People remained in their dorms and apartments, unsure if they were under active threat or safe away from key buildings. Some sheltered in The Statler Hotel and Olin Library, unable to leave given the uncertainty of the alerts. Bingying Liu grad found herself sheltered in The Statler after working a shift at the hotel — without clear guidance on what to do. “At 2:30, students started calling their parents panicked, and there were a lot of rumors on the internet,” she said. “We were hoping that we can get clearer messages from the police or from the alerts, so that we don’t have to listen to those rumors.” See CORNELL ALERT page 2

KATRIEN DE WAARD / SUN STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Caution tape | Cornell University Police respond to ongoing bomb threats to buildings across campus on Sunday, securing the perimeter while investigating the threats.

S.A. Discusses Policing on Campus, Ethics Committee In Thursday meeting, Student Assembly debates NDAs signed by appropriations committee members Following a June 2020 request by President Martha Pollack that the committee look into changing campus

By ELI PALLRAND Sun Staff Writer

During Thursday’s Student Assembly meeting, representatives heard from Public Safety Advisory Committee member Conor Hodges ’21 on requests for S.A. support and from two representatives on their nomination for the forthcoming S.A. Office of Ethics, before discussing appropriations committee non-disclosure agreements and the ongoing byline funding cycle. The Public Safety Advisory Committee, mandated by New York State law, is a University committee where students, faculty and staff advise the Cornell University Police Department and University administration on issues of public safety.

The committee has been working to design new campus safety protocols that use CUPD less and in ways that students find more reassuring. safety measures to better engage with the University’s community, and a February 2021 survey indicating broad discomfort with CUPD, the committee has been working to design new campus safety protocols that

use CUPD less and in ways that students find more reassuring. In his presentation, Hodges, one of two undergraduate representatives on the committee, said the problem facing the PSAC right now is one of figuring out how to move away from CUPD responding to 75 percent of 911 calls despite one in three Cornellians feeling less safe when CUPD responds, according to the survey. “The current infrastructure puts students and community members at large in the position where the decision is to either summon an institution which creates fear and unease, or to summon no help at all, which is the very definition of structural racism,” Hodges said. See STUDENT ASSEMBLY page 3

News

Arts

Sports

Weather

Eric Nam

Reach for the Sky

Finally Victorious

Mostly Sunny

The Korean-American singer will headline a concert sponsored by the Cornell Concert Commission. | Page 3

Life is messy with its infinite choices, suggests one new Cornell-written and directed play. | Page 4

Football marked its second overall win of the season, and its first Ivy League win on Saturday. | Page 8

HIGH: 63º LOW: 40º


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11-08-21 entire issue hi res by The Cornell Daily Sun - Issuu