INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880
The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 138, No. 57
TUESDAY, MARCH 15, 2022
n
ITHACA, NEW YORK
8 Pages – Free
News
Arts
Sports
Weather
Huma Abedin
Teach-In
Men’s Hockey
Cloudy With Light Rain
Author and chief of staff to Hillary Clinton, Huma Abedin will discuss her political career and her new memoir. | Page 3
Guillermo Alvarez ’22 calls for implementing University-wide programming as the Ukrainian crisis intensifies. | Page 4
Cornell lost the decisive third game against Colgate and saw its 2021-2022 campaign come to an end. | Page 8
Cornellians Tackle Agricultural Challenges at Annual Hackathon
HIGH: 51º LOW: 35º COURTESY OF CORNELL UNIVERSITY
“We have all these major challenges, but it’s not one person that’s going to solve them,” Alcaine said. “It’s going to From Mar. 11 to Mar.13, Schurman Hall bustled be a team of people with diverse backwith conversation as teams of four to six Cornellians grounds.” As an animal science major, particicombined technical, business and agricultural knowledge to tackle challenges based around food and farm- pant Colin Kadis ’22 felt his experience ing during Cornell Initiative for Digital Agriculture’s with agriculture and dairy management Hacking the day away | Students combine technical, business and agriculfourth annual hackathon. The event returned in-person was beneficial to his team. Their project, tural knowledge to tackle issues in the agricultural industry at annual hackathon. after going virtual for a year due to the COVID-19 named Buen Equipo, planned to provide augmented reality goggles to farmworkers to help them On Sunday morning, each team presented their pandemic. monitor their safety and productiv- ideas, showcasing their creative pitches and proficiency According to Prof. Samuel Alcaine, food science, who serves as the event’s “We have all these major ity. The goggles have an overlay on in devising punny team names. A wide variety of projthe edges of their vision that would ects were on display, from Team That’s Bananas’ plan co-chair, the hackathon welcomed challenges, but it’s not provide information on things like to detect and prevent the spread of banana diseases, to both undergraduate and graduate stuone person that’s going exhaustion levels and the amount of Team Waste Knot’s app designed to monitor the freshdent participants from various fields crops the workers harvested. ness of food in home refrigerators. of study, including computer science, to solve them.” Team Hotpot, who proposed sensors inside of plants After a welcome ceremony and economics and plant science. The team formation on Friday, the com- that could notify farmers of disease outbreaks, was one team challenges were designed to be Prof. Samuel Alcaine petitors got to work on their projects of eight teams to advance to the final round. Max Li cross-disciplinary, so teams benefitted on Saturday morning. The teams ’23, one of the members, noted that the event gave them from having members with different received help from mentors, who were experts in a good opportunity to explore and work with people skillsets. Alcaine described the event as more of an various fields and ranged from Cornell faculty to involved with different disciplines. “We’re so used to seeing things through our industry, “Ideationthon”, a concept that emphasizes the creativi- employees at the sponsoring companies such as ty of ideas presented, rather than a hackathon. Projects Microsoft and Bayer. Some participants stayed up it’s easy to make incorrect assumptions about related required a mix of components to be successful, as they working until as early as 1 a.m. on Sunday morning, industries,” Li said. were also judged on marketability, novelty and feasibil- building websites and testing demos to be shown off See HACKATHON page 2 to the judges. ity rather than purely technical strength. By CAMDEN WEHRLE Sun Staff Writer
Now Accepting SNAP/EBT Sophomore Ngunda ’24, Anabel’s grocery furthers commitment to food justice By LAURA GRIES
$250 each month for groceries. Students who qualify for federal work study or have an expected family contribution of $0 may now be eligible for this program. When Anabel’s Grocery first opened its doors in With Anabel’s being the only campus grocery Anabel Taylor Hall to the Cornell community, it store, the newly accepted program provides students came with the goal of alleviating food insecurity at the option to buy their groceries in a convenient locaCornell and a mission to provide fresh, nutritious and tion, at prices they can afford. affordable food to all students. On Feb. 16, Anabel’s This is the first time that Anabel’s is acceptreopened for the ing SNAP and spring semester Anabel’s student and is furtherleadership team ing that mission says they hope by now acceptto make the groing Supplemental cery and this N u t r i t i o n new program Assistance Program easily accessible and Electronic to Cornell’s large Benefit Transfers student body. To for eligible studo so, Anabel’s dents. is working with SNAP is a fedthe Office of the eral program that Student Advocate issues SNAP dolto hold free worklars, which can be shops for potenCOURTESY OF ANABEL’S GROCERY used like cash, to tially eligible stuindividuals who Food shopping | Cornellians and Ithaca residents shop for groceries dents. meet certain eligi- at Anabel’s Grocery, where SNAP/EBT benefits are now being accepted. “We are workbility criteria to pay ing hard to make for groceries. Eligibility varies in each state and is this an easy service for students to use and the system determined by an individual or family meeting or is working well.” said Dylan Rodgers ’23, the collabobeing below a certain income bracket. ration and education lead of Anabel’s. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, more students are eligible for SNAP dollars and may receive up to See ANABEL’S page 3 Sun Contributor
Student in College of Human Ecology, Dies By ANGELA BUNAY Sun Managing Editor
Lisa Ngunda ’24 has passed away over the past weekend, according to a Monday afternoon email from Vice President for Student and Campus Life Ryan Lombardi. Ngunda was a sophomore in the College of Human Ecology who was passionate about health and medicine. She studied human biology and health and society with an interest in becoming a physician and neurosurgeon, according to the announcement from the College of Human Ecology Dean Rachel Dunifon. Ngunda was involved in many student organizations including Nigerian Students’ Association, Advent Christian Fellowship, Caribbean Students’ Association, PanAfrican Students Association, Black Bio-medical and Technical Association and Pre-Professional Association Toward Careers in Health.
Born in Tanzania, Ngunda moved to Massachusetts as a young child, and throughout high school she was an active volunteer at University of Massachusetts Memorial HealthAlliance Hospital in Leominster, Massachusetts. “In speaking with her father, he relayed that Lisa had a very kind heart and was always seeking to support others,” said Lombardi in his email to the University community. This is the third student death announced during the Spring 2022 semester. The University will hold a community support meeting on Tuesday, March 15 from 5 to 6 p.m. in the Music Room (411) in Willard Straight Hall. There will also be a college of human ecology specific support meeting on Thursday, March 17 from 5 to 6 p.m. in Goldwin Smith Hall, Room 162. Angela Bunay can be reached at abunay@cornellsun.com.