11-1-21 entire issue hi res

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INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 138, No. 28

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2021

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8 Pages – Free

ITHACA, NEW YORK

Arts

Arts

Sports

Weather

Gender and Murder

Memes and Meaning

Men’s Hockey Wins

Mostly Sunny

Award winning movie Titane is not for the faint of heart, combining horror and eroticism. | Page 4

Tik Tok creators’ obsession with the latest season of You shows the complexity of control and love. | Page 4

S.A. Debates How To Replace Finance V.P. Mid-Semester

Hockey remains undefeated with second consecutive weekend overtime win.

HIGH: 52º LOW: 39º

| Page 8

Fall trees paint the town

Funding cycle continues with interim V.P. By SOFIA RUBINSON and ELI PALLRAND Sun Staff Writers

Following the resignation of its vice president of finance, the Student Assembly is trying to decide on a replacement as the end of semester funding cycle deadline approaches. At the end of the S.A.’s Oct. 21 meeting, S.A. president Anuli Ononye ’22 announced that Morgan Baker ’23 had resigned from her role as vice president of finance, which oversees the appropriations committee — the body within the S.A. which allocates funding to student organizations on campus from the Student Activity Fee. In an email to the Sun, Baker said she voluntarily resigned from the position for personal reasons. “I will continue to fulfill my duties as a good representative in the position of an Undesignated Representative At-Large,” Baker wrote. The Student Activity Fee is a mandatory fee that all students must pay to fund student organizations. Currently, the SAF is $309 per year for every student. The S.A. determines how much money each byline funded organization will receive every two years. Byline funded organizations, which each get a fraction of the student activity fee, work as umbrella groups to fund other campus organizations. The lack of a public rationale for Baker’s resignation has left some S.A. members scratching their heads. “There’s a lot that happens behind closed doors,” freshman representative Andrew Juan ’25 said. “We have, one, S.A. members confused, and two, now we have the general population confused.” Public conversations about the developments within the appropriations committee are suppressed, in part, by the committee’s rules. Members sign permanently binding non-disclosure agreements that bar them from disclosing the committee’s confidential materials, which include the information submitted by organizations in support of their applications for funding. Additionally, votes within the committee are anonymous. According to Baker, the NDAs and anonymous voting See STUDENT ASSEMBLY page 3

BEN PARKER / SUN SENIOR EDITOR

Resignation | Student Assembly members are seen at work at a meeting last September.

JULIA NAGEL / SUN ASSISTANT PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

On a combined Halloween Weekend and Parents Weekend, students and families admired the fall foliage on campus.

Lecturers Discuss Evidence-Based Gun Violence Prevention Strategies By ALEXIS AHN and TAMARA KAMIS Sun Contributor and Sun News Editor

In a Friday evening lecture, President of Heartland Alliance Evelyn Diaz and Prof. Jens Ludwig, public policy, University of Chicago, argued that insights from behavioral science could be critical for reducing gun violence in the United States by helping people de-escalate conflicts. As gun violence rates rose sharply across the country during the pandemic, many are looking

for solutions. At the same time, there is growing concern across the United States about the need for criminal justice system reform. Ludwig and Diaz argue that behavioral science-based interventions to help people learn to de-escalate conflict are a key for reducing gun violence. The lecture was supported by a gift from Mark Horowitz and Jennifer Koen-Horowitz ’93, and was co-sponsored by the Cornell Institute for Public Affairs, the Sloan Program in Health See LECTURE page 3

Speakers to Reflect on Baghdad History By JOHN YOON Sun City Editor

On Monday, two Iraqi scholars will speak about their work in Baghdad to restore the architecture and accompanying social history after the American invasion of Iraq in a Cornell webinar at noon. At the event, which is titled “Iraq: From the Inside Out,” Prof. Mohammed Qasim Al Ani, architecture, Al Nahrain University, and Prof. Saba Al Ali, architecture, Al Nahrain University, will speak about their work in Baghdad transforming urban centers and addressing the architectural issues left after the American invasion of Iraq. The webinar is hosted by the Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies and the Critical Ottoman and PostOttoman Studies program.

JOAO SILVA / THE NEW YORK TIMES

Ruined arch | A man walks by a building ruin in Baghdad in 2010.

According to the event announcement, the invasion led to the collapse of social

order with the facilities that support urban development — like architecture, state norms and city planning — broke down. The speakers have since worked to improve and address the issues that emerged from the invasion, specifically focusing on Baghdad. Receiving her Ph.D. from the University of Baghdad, most of Ali’s work has been focused on the history of architecture, local architectural heritage and urban history. Most recently, Ali has published a study identifying that insufficient budgets and a lack of labor has led to Iraq applying corrective rather than preventative maintenance on heritage buildings. Ani also received his Ph.D. from the University of Baghdad, focusing on strategies developing neglected areas and preservSee IRAQ page 3


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