11-26-18 entire issue hi res

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INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 135, No. 40

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 2018

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12 Pages – Free

ITHACA, NEW YORK

News

News

News

Weather

Lobbying in Albany

Magical Performance

‘Lifeless’

Rainy and Foggy

Students hope to meet legislators in the N.Y. State Capitol to lobby for the Gender Expression NonDiscrimination Act. | Page 3

Jessica Lussier ’21 describes the way the magic of Cirque du Soleil translates from the stage to the silver screen. | Page 7

No.15 Cornell men's hockey turned in a disappointing effort in a 4-1 loss to Harvard in New York City. | Page 12

HIGH: 44º LOW: 34º

Bus Crash Driver Faces Homicide Charge Driver allegedly had cocaine in system at the time of October crash that killed Cornell alumna

PHOTO COURTESTY OF WNEP-TV

By SARAH SKINNER Sun Assistant News Editor

Pennsylvania prosecutors on Monday charged a Big Red Bullet bus driver with 33 counts including vehicular homicide, saying the Bronx man had cocaine in his system when the bus crashed last month, killing a recent Cornell alumna. Charles D. Dixon, 50, had told police that he “fell asleep at the wheel,” but prosecutors said in charges filed Monday that traces of cocaine were found in Dixon’s bloodstream when he was tested at a local hospital following the crash on Oct. 14.

Lethal crash| Rebecca Blanco MBA ’17 was killed when the Big Red Bullet bus — travelling from Ithaca to New York City in mid-October — swerved off the road and crashed near Scranton, Pennsylvania.

See BUS page 4

Student Abandons House Neglected How a Student Ended Up at the By Landlords to Sleep in Library By MATTHEW McGOWEN Sun Senior Editor

Water flooded out of the toilet in the bathroom of Shimon Shuchat ’19 and Mei Zheng ’18 on Sept. 24, collapsing a section of the ceiling in the apartment below them. The students had disabled all of the apartment’s carbon monoxide alarms and smoke detectors, and the gas oven was left on to heat the apartment while they slept. The tenants’ months-long back-and-forth with landlords David and Barbara Lower would eventually lead to multiple housing inspections, a threat of a lawsuit from the city and withheld rent. The stress of the situation would cause Shuchat to abandon living in the house entirely, leaving many of his possessions and the food in the fridge behind. Like many off-campus living arrangements, 117 Thurston is a free-standing house divided into separate apartments. A

PHOTOS BY BEN PARKER / SUN STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Debilitated housing | Students used the oven, above, to heat the apartment after the boilers failed at 117 Thurston Ave., right.

creaky wood staircase winds up the exterior to Zheng and Shuchat’s fourth floor apartment. The grade behind the building is so steep that a bridge from the hill provides a second entrance directly to their door. County records estimate the property at 103 years old. Expired Certificate: A Missed Warning Sign

Shuchat said that it was only after signing the lease that he and Zheng discovered that the house on Thurston had no certificate of compliance, which is a legally required document for all dwellings according to the City Code. Certificates of compliance are required to ensure that dwellings are regularly checked for adherence to all applicable housing laws. Single and two-family units must be inspected every five years, and buildings with multiple units or more See HOUSE page 4

Wrong Cornell

By ALEX HALE Sun Staff Writer

When Martin Rosenfeld was still a high school senior, his college application list included an Ivy League school in Ithaca. A few months later, he got into Cornell and decided to go there. But when he left for school in August of his freshman year, he headed for Iowa, not New York. Rosenfeld intended to apply to Cornell University, as he did to schools like Vanderbilt and Brown. However, during the highly stressful process, he accidentally applied to Cornell College, which is in Mount Vernon, Iowa. He ended up going there and he has no regrets about it. Coming from a military background, Rosenfeld went through the college application process at Vicenza American High School, an American military high school in Italy. Many of his classmates went to Brown and Penn, and with similar good grades, Rosenfeld was a worthy candidate for any school in the country — including Cornell University. Rosenfeld had aimed for Cornell’s scenic location and academic prestige, but in the midst of the stress and technicalities, he made a life-altering mistake: he sent his SAT scores to Cornell College instead of Cornell University. Realizing the mess-up, Rosenfeld decided to cut short his application to Cornell University and continue the accidental pursuit of the school he knew “absolutely nothing” about at the time. Cornell College is a small, liberal arts school in Mount Vernon, Iowa. The school has an enrollment of about 1,000 undergrads. Although not as well-known as Cornell University, they proclaim themselves the original Cornell since they were founded 12 years before the University. The Cornells are similar in some unappealing ways. Both are placed on steep hills and both have cold winters, although the College claims that they See CORNELL page 3


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