11-27-18 entire issue hi res

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INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 135, No. 41

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2018

n

ITHACA, NEW YORK

12 Pages – Free

News

Science

Sports

Weather

Culinary Creations

Agricultural Efficiency

B.C. to C.U.

Light Snow

Students made original dishes during the Asian Chopped culinary competition on Monday. | Page 3

Enhancing photosynthesis in corn by Cornell researchers has the potential to revolutionize agriculture. | Page 8

Four men's hockey sophomores have come to East Hill together from junior hockey. | Page 12

HIGH: 37º LOW: 32º

Cornell Exhibit to Feature Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's Shoes By AMINA KILPATRICK Sun Staff Writer

Worn and scuffed with cracks and holes in them, the shoes that Rep.-elect Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) wore campaigning will be shown at Cornell in an exhibit beginning Dec. 6. The exhibit, entitled “Women Empowered: Fashions From the Frontline” will feature clothing items that represent women’s empowerment. The exhibit is part of the biennial celebration that the Cornell Council for the Arts has held throughout the fall semester. After winning the primary election in June 2018, Ocasio-Cortez explained on her Twitter the significance of the shoes to her. In her viral tweet, she used the shoes as an example of the hard work she put into campaigning. “Here’s my 1st pair of campaign shoes,” OcasioCortez said. “I knocked doors until rainwater came through my soles. Respect the hustle. We won bc we out-worked the competition. Period.” Curator of the exhibit, Prof. Denise Green, fiber science and apparel design, said Ocasio-Cortez’s shoes

were a good representation of the 2018 Biennial theme, “Duration: Passage, Persistence, Survival,” and are unique to the exhibit since worn clothing items are not often displayed. “In fashion exhibitions you almost never see a garment that is not pristine,” Green said. “The shoes are so beautiful in their own way in that they show these concepts that are apart of the CCA Biennial — the concepts of persistence, of duration, of survival. You can see time worn away on these shoes with COURTESY OF RACHEL GETMAN

NYC Footwear | Shoes belonging to Rep.-elect Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) will be featured in an exhibit at Cornell.

hard work.” As a member of the curatorial team, Jenny Leigh Du Puis grad said Ocasio-Cortez’s shoes came up as the team was thinking about examples of women in government and important fashion pieces. In order to obtain the shoes, Green reached out to Ocasio-Cortez’s team. According to Green, Ocasio-Cortez glady loaned the shoes for the exhibit; however, she did not gift them to Cornell since they mean so See SHOES page 4

Deans Explain Graduate Students' Compensation Packages, Stipends

BORIS TSANG / SUN ASSISTANT PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

Icy Ithaca | A participant in last year's ice carving competition at Ice Fest blowtorches his sculpture.

By YUICHIRO KAKUTANI Sun News Editor

Ice Fest to Cool Down Ithaca Commons, Showcase Ice Carving By RONNI MOK Sun Staff Writer

Downtown Ithaca will host its 12th Annual Ice Fest to celebrate the cold weather from Dec. 6 to 8. The three-day festival will feature an ice carving competition along with other activities such as a silent disco, fire dancing demonstrations, an Ice Bar and a Chowder Cook-off. “The idea for Ice Fest began when we were searching for a festival that would be enjoyable in cold weather,” said Summer Keown, special events director of the Downtown Ithaca Alliance. “The ice carvers thrive in the winter — the colder the better.” This year, the ice carving competition will again be a part of Ice Fest. There will be a speed carving single-elimination competition on Friday eve-

ning and a two-block showpiece challenge, which includes three rounds of competition, on Saturday. “The sculptors who participate are incredibly talented, and they compete all over,” Keown said. “As this is my first year serving as the event director, I am most interested in seeing the ice carvers creating their unique artworks.” Aaron Costic was the winner of the last ice carving competition, which was judged by members of the National Ice Carving Association. Costic also previously won the Ice Carving World Championships in Alaska, and his 2017 Ice Fest first-prize sculpture “Wind” was of an angel’s torso. In addition to the ice carving competition, the Ice Fest will host the Chowder Cook-Off, which See FESTIVAL page 4

Two University deans explained that the current financial compensation package for doctoral and some masters students is in the “middle of the pack” compared to Ivy League and comparable peer institutions at the semester’s last Graduate and Professional Student Assembly meeting Monday. Jason Kahabka, associate dean for administration at the Graduate School, said that graduate students working as teaching assistants or

research assistants will at minimum receive a $26,426 stipend during the academic year. The stipend for the nine-month period is slightly lower than the $26,582 living wage for Tompkins County residents — a figure calculated by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology that was cited by Kahabka. “What [the living wage] doesn’t take into account is that students also have health insurance covered and don't have to pay certain taxes,” Kahabka said. “In general the See GPSA page 4

MICHAEL WENYE LI / SUN PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

Money, money, money | At its Monday meeting, GPSA discusses the financial compensation packages graduate students receive.


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