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INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 130, No. 86

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2014

!

ITHACA, NEW YORK

16 Pages – Free

News

Arts

Sports

Weather

All the Weill

Re-Review

Two-Time Champs

Mostly Cloudy HIGH: 18° LOW: -15°

The Belfer Research Building, a $650 million 18-story structure, opened at WCMC on Jan. 31. | Page 3

Marissa Tranquilli ’15 reviews the drug cartel re-pilot of Archer.

Cornell gymnastics won its home meet, the Big Red Invitational, for the second year in a row. | Page 16

| Page 8

Demand Grows for Int’l. Students’ Mental Health Resources

A worldy conversation

By TYLER ALICEA Sun Senior Writer

Mental health resources for international students could become increasingly “diluted” as more international students enroll at Cornell without increases in funding to these programs, according to Enrico Bonatti ’14, international liaison at-large for the Student Assembly. The number of international students enrolling at Cornell has increased from 15.9 percent to 19.1 percent between 2003 and 2012, following a national trend, The Sun reported in December. Bonatti — who is an international student — said that despite the increase in the number of international students at Cornell, the amount of resources provided to them has not increased during his time at Cornell. He added that he believes there needs to be a push for See INTERNATIONAL page 4

RYAN LANDVATER / SUN SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER

Jane Edwards, dean of international and professional experience at Yale University, speaks at the Symposium on Meaningful International Experiences in the Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies Monday.

Study: Female-Owned Grad StudentsVote for Workers’Comp Businesses Last Longer GPSA asks for monetary compensation,medical care after injuries By ANUSHKA MEHROTRA

while working on the Cornell Sun Senior Writer campus. Though graduate students at The Graduate Professional universities in the State University Student Assembly passed a resolu- of New York system receive comtion Monday calling upon the pensation for their injuries, Cornell does not provide mandatory “The University makes sure that we workers’ compensaare [never] classified as employees.” tion — insurance that provides moneFranziska Doerflinger grad tary benefits and medical care to University to provide monetary workers who become injured or ill and health compensation to grad- as a result of their job — for graduate students who are injured uate students, according to Paul

Benefits for grads | The Graduate Professional Student Assembly voted to ask the University for workers’ compensation for graduate students Monday.

Berry grad, who sponsored the resolution along with Nicole Baran grad, counsel to the GPSA, and Evan Cortens grad, former GPSA president. While graduate students receive stipends for their research, the University does not officially classify them as employees, according to Berry. “We’ve been trying to answer the pretty simple question of what happens when a graduate student gets injured on the job,” Berry See COMPENSATION page 5 SIMON LEE / SUN STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

By AIMEE CHO

prietorships in Texas from 1999-2006. “We broke it down into In certain industries, much smaller slices of the female-owned businesses economy — different have a longer survival rate regions, controlling for than male-owned business- industry, and different es, a study by two Cornell industries, controlling for professors challenges gender regions. We found that if you don’t control for indusstereotypes found. try or geograP r o f . phy, you can M i c h e l e replicate findWilliams, ings that look industrial and like malelabor relations, owned busiwho conducted nesses survive the study with longer throughProf. Arturs out the econoKalnins, hotel my,” Williams administration, ” said. “But once said their goal you look at was to debunk Michele Williams slices, you can the myth that find industries female business and coherent owners are less successful than their male groups of industries where women are surviving counterparts. “This study focus[ed] on longer.” Williams said they found the idea that in economics, and in some research on four major sectors where small businesses, there’s female-owned businesses something called the Female survived for longer periods U n d e r p e r f o r m a n c e of time: gift-giving, clothHypothesis, [which says] ing, alcohol-serving estabthat female business owners lishments and educational tend to not perform as services, which also includes well,” Williams said. “My dance studios. “One of our more surco-author and I really wanted to push back on that prising findings was that eating establishments that serve idea.” According to Williams, alcohol as well as drinking she and Kalnins looked at data from one million proSee WOMEN page 5 Sun Staff Writer

“You can find industries ... where women are surviving longer.


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