12-06-21 entire issue hi res

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INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 138, No. 41

MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 2021

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ITHACA, NEW YORK

8 Pages – Free

News

Arts

Sports

Weather

Immigration Journalism

The Great

Hockey Upset

Rain And Clouds

Three award-winning journalists gathered to discuss immigration reporting in a Wednesday event. | Page 3

Charlee Mandy ‘23 reviews the erratic second season of television series The Great. | Page 4

Number 9 Cornell tied with Number 19 Clarkson after its defensive collapse during final minutes. | Page 8

HIGH: 55º LOW: 29º

Ithaca Winter Festival Lights Up Commons By CAMDEN WEHRLE Sun Contributor

As the sun dipped below the horizon on Saturday night, the Ithaca Commons were illuminated by the light installations of the Winter Lights Festival. Despite the cold of a December night in Ithaca, many residents were still attracted to the festivities just off of Seneca Street. The festival is organized by the Downtown Ithaca Alliance and runs for two consecutive weekends from Dec. 3 to Dec. 11, with events scheduled on Fridays and Saturdays. The Lights Festival had its start in 2019, taking over from the Ithaca Ice Festival, which featured ice sculptures rather than light displays. Light installations created by the Beyond Art Collective were spread around the Common and include light projections, an LED christmas tree and Sparky the Unicorn –– a large, multicolored unicorn on wheels with a moveable head. Luis Cuanda tended the Ice Bar, serving alcoholic drinks from behind a counter made of ice. Cuanda said he has enjoyed working at IDA events for a few years, saying they are good activities to keep Ithacans busy and promote downtown businesses. He also said he liked interacting with the visitors. “It’s good to connect to people of different cultures,” See FESTIVAL page 3

MICHAEL WENYE LI / SUN FILE PHOTO

Precious necklace | Ithacans participate in the annual 2019 Winter Lights Festival, which was complete with ice sculptures and rotating light installations, such as the one seen here.

Students Plan Out Study Days Ahead of Final Exam Season By DYLAN VAN BRAMER Sun Staff Writer

As classes wrap up this Tuesday, students are preparing for finals –– but not right away. Prior to the pre-exam pencil sharpening and deep breaths, come three days of a “study period” from Wednesday, Dec. 8 to Friday, Dec. 10. With libraries open and office hours

back in person, students are once again crowding into study spaces on campus. With a sudden lack of structure for many students following a busy semester, they will be tested with the promise of free time before their actual exams. “In my head, I plan on being up at 8 a.m., getting a coffee and not leaving the library all day. It always ends up not being that intense,” said Camille van der Watt

’24. Learning from prior exam periods, van der Watt has now adopted the practice of using apps like Forest that utilize the Pomodoro method -– working in cycles of studying for two hours without the distraction of her phone, and then taking twenty minute breaks. Sarah Kanuk ’25 plans on spending much of her time reviewing material at Crossings Café in Toni Morrison Hall, but

taking breaks to head down to the gym when she feels she cannot focus and having restful evenings with her friends. “I think that the “In my head, I plan on University being up at 8 a.m., r e a l l y encourages getting a coffee, diversity and not leaving the of interest, library...” but I don’t think that Camille van der Watt ’24 it comes from a wellness perspective,” Kanuk said. “It’s more of a personal decision to mindfully do nothing or to do something healing and that creates personal balance.” Despite pressure from final exams and projects, recent University messages and programming have discussed student wellbeing. An email from Ryan Lombardi, Vice President for Student and Campus Life, to the student body encourages students to “get together with friends for a meal, participate in campus events and stay active” during these days before the exam period. The Tatkon Center for First-Year Students is placing emphasis on balance,offering both peer-tutoring and “de-stressor” activities like origami and puzzles throughout the study period. These types of in-person programming represent a departure from the largely remote or isolated study environments of the 2020-2021 academic year.

ASHLEY HE / SUN FILE PHOTO

Symmetry | As finals season gets underway, students head to their favorite libraries and cafes to prepare for final exams, as pictured above in 2019.

See STUDY page 3


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