11 01 18 entire issue hi res

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INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 135, No. 31

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2018

n

16 Pages – Free

ITHACA, NEW YORK

News

Arts

Sports

Weather

Against the Goose

Collab Albums

Bounce Back

High Chance Of Rain

Students demonstrated in Ho Plaza to protest Canada Goose’s practices. | Page 3

Adam Cohen ’19 has written a poetry book that “operates as a ballad for young queer individuals.” | Page 9

Men’s hockey seeks to regroup after a pair of devastating losses this past weekend. | Page 16

ILR Suspends China Exchange Program

HIGH: 48˚ LOW: 45˚

Standing again

Friedman states concern with actions ‘counter to the principles that Cornell holds’ By ROCHELLE LI

program. “Once it became clear that [Renmin] had been taking some actions that were quite obviously counter to the principles that Cornell The School of Industrial and Labor Relations holds, the question was, what could I do?” suspended its exchange program with China’s Friedman told The Sun. “I decided that doing Renmin University on Oct. 20 because of Rennothing was not an option.” min’s growing academic freedom restrictions. Academic freedom, according to Friedman, Last summer, students from Renmin Uniis slightly different between students and facversity were arrested for protesting in support of ulty. For students, it means “learning without workers’ rights, according to Eli Friedman, direcfear” and being able to have an opinion. For tor of international programs at ILR. Friedman PROF. FRIEDMAN faculty, it means talking about and researching said in an email he posted on Twitter that he believes Renmin University failed to protect its students when conflicts. Friedman thinks the Chinese Community Party they were arrested by the police and also issued punishments restricts both to the degree that academic freedom in Rento students who protested. Over the years, Friedman has min University no longer exists. “Now, for labor [research] as well, you’re explicitly being also noticed significant restrictions on academic freedom in Renmin University. After consulting Cornell faculty and See RENMIN page 5 administration, Friedman decided to suspend the exchange Sun Staff Writer

Synagogue shooting

ECOLE POLYTECHNIQUE FEDERALE DE LAUSANNE VIA NEW YORK TIMES

Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne helped David Mzee walk again with implant-like devices.

Arts and Sciences Passes New Curriculum Proposal By MIGUEL SOTO and ANNE SNABES Sun Staff Writer and Sun Assistant News Editor

HILLARY SWIFT / THE NEW YORK TIMES

Yeshiva Girls School students attend the funeral for University of Pittsburgh researcher Joyce Fienberg, who was one of the 11 victims of Saturday’s shooting at the Tree of Life Synagogue.

The College of Arts and Sciences will allow students to take sign language to fulfill the college’s language requirement and will have a “social difference” requirement. The college is hoping to implement these changes in Fall 2020. The college’s new curriculum proposal was passed on Tuesday, after an online vote for faculty from October 15 to 29. 182 faculty members voted in favor of the proposal, 90 voted against it and 18 abstained. “I think it’s a good sign that the faculty has come together around the proposal that’s been endorsed by the majority of the faculty,” said Prof. Tom Pepinsky, government, chair of the curriculum committee. The current distribution

requirement system will be reorganized so there will be 10 distribution categories, and students need to take a course in each category. New categories include statistics and data science, social difference and global citizenship. The Arts and Science Curriculum Committee released its final report in March. This report recommended shortening the current language requirement — which makes students take one non-introductory course or 11 credits of instruction in one language — to one non-introductory course or two classes of at least three credits each in the same language. This recommendation received pushback from language faculty and graduate students and was ultimately not included in a revised version of See ARTS page 3

Cornell to Host Support Rally Hot Truck’s Absent From Usual Spot By MAGDALENA SMITH Sun Staff Writer

Cornell will mirror national protests by showing support for transgender, nonbinary and gender nonconforming people on Monday, Nov. 5. The rally will take place at 4:30 p.m. on the steps outside Goldwin Smith Hall. The rally is in response to a memo obtained by the New York Times in which the Trump

administration’s Department of Health and Human Services said it is working to establish a legal definition of sex under Title IX such that gender is “on a biological basis that is clear, grounded in science, objective and administrable.” Protest against this memo erupted on social media through the hashtag #WeWillNotBeErased, which the rally is named after. See RALLY page 5

Shortstop Deli declines to comment on truck’s disappearance By HUNTER SEITZ Sun Staff Writer

Normally parked at the intersection of Stewart and University Avenue, the Hot Truck has been missing since the beginning of the semester for unknown reasons. The exact date it disappeared is unknown, but students have

reported that it was not in its regular spot at the start of the Fall 2018 semester. “I noticed that [it] had disappeared once I got back to campus following my summer break,” Justin Kim ’20 told The Sun. “I drive on that road occasionally and noticed it was missing.” Robert Petrillose opened the

Hot Truck first opened over 50 years ago in 1960, and he operated the truck until he retired in late 2000. Ownership of the truck was then handed over to Albert and Cindy Smith, owners of Shortstop Deli. As of yet, there is still no confirmed reason as to why the See HOT TRUCK page 5


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