03 21 14 entire issue lo res

Page 1

INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 130, No. 112

FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 2014

!

ITHACA, NEW YORK

12 Pages – Free

News

Arts

Sports

Weather

Wine Meets Design

Musical Exhibiton

Shredding Ice

Partly Sunny HIGH: 43° LOW: 23º

A new downtown art studio will allow Ithacans to create art while enjoying wine. | Page 3

The men’s ice hockey team will play Union College on Friday in the ECAC semifinals. | Page 12

Marissa Tranquilli ’15 previews what she calls the short, sweet and powerful 35MM at Risley. | Page 8

Ludacris,Matt and Kim Set International Students Required to Buy C.U. To Perform on Slope Day

Students have mixed reaction to announcement By KAITLYN TIFFANY Sun Arts and Entertainment Editor

Rap artist Ludacris will perform on Slope Day on May 8, the Slope Day Programming Board announced Thursday. Indie rock group Matt and Kim will open. Sun Arts and Entertainent Editor Kaitlyn Tiffany ’15 along with members of the Cornell community sound off on the Programming Board’s decison. At 4:45 p.m. Thursday, the Slope Day Programming Board announced the headlining act and one of the supporting acts for this year’s Slope Day. Now that the fact that Brooklyn indie-duo Matt and Kim will open for rap artist Ludacris on May 8 is public knowledge, it is time to cue the student reaction.

The reaction to the selection of opener Matt and Kim is altogether more favorable than last year’s reaction to Ivy-bred fratstar Hoodie Allen opening for Kendrick Lamar and miles ahead of 2012’s notoriously derided selection of mainstream one-hit wonder Taio Cruz as co-headliner. Slope Day Programming Board Executive Chair Lee Singer ’14 said he was happy with the choice of a “very different” and “very popular” indie rock group. “To spread the diversity of the festival feel around, we were very interested in Matt and Kim,” Singer said. “It will definitely appeal to a different segment of the Cornell community, but it could definitely bring everyone together. That’s ultimately the goal of Slope Day: To bring very different groups of Cornellians together to celebrate.” See SLOPE DAY page 9

Swimming Pools | Students celebrate last year’s Slope Day, which featured rapper Kendrick Lamar.

Student Insurance Plan

By NOAH RANKIN Sun City Editor

Beginning in the 2014 to 2015 academic year, the University will require all international students to purchase the Cornell Student Health Insurance Plan as a result of some international students purchasing “insufficient” plans that potentially rack up thousands of dollars in medical costs, officials say. “Historically, we have had issues and concerns with international students buying travel-type individual “Many [international plans,” said student insurstudents] are not familiar ance administrator Jo Ann Molnar-Kieffer, a member with the high costs of of the University’s Student healthcare in the U.S.” Insurance Advisory Committee. “We tried Jo Ann Molnar-Kieffer addressing those with communication and trying to guide people into making informed purchase decisions.” The decision was ultimately made at the end of last semester to make purchasing SHIP mandatory. According to Valerie Lyon, associate director of business and finance at Gannett Health Services, around 90 percent of international students have already been purchasing SHIP without being required, and several peer institutions — including Ohio State and Carnegie Mellon University — have altered their policies to make university health plans the norm. “Many [international students] are not familiar with the high cost of healthcare in the U.S.,” Molnar-Kieffer said. “They may purchase an inadequate insurance plan for $1,000 and consider that purchase price their out-of-pocket-expense. However, when such a plan has numerous exclusions, they find out they have to See INSURANCE page 4

CONNOR ARCHARD / SUN SPORTS PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

Cornell Will Offer Traffic Control Gates to Appear on East Avenue American Studies Class in Spring 2015 By ALISHA FOSTER

Sun Staff Writer

By SOFIA HU Sun Staff Writer

In light of strong student reactions, American Studies 2001: The First American University will be offered in spring 2015, according to Prof. Sabine Haenni, director of the American Studies Program. American Studies 2001 — a one-credit course taught for the last four years by Corey Earle ’07, associate director of student programs in the Office of Alumni Affairs — was going to be replaced by a fourcredit course in honor of the sesquicentennial, which will still be offered in fall 2014, The Sun previously reported. However, students, alumni and faculty petitioned for the return of the course through social media, where the campaign has its own Twitter hashtag — #SaveAMST2001. See COURSE page 5

The University says it will install traffic control gates at the restricted section of East Avenue to form a physical barrier against general traffic this month. According to Media Relations Specialist Joe Schwartz, the new gates will be raised by a transponder when the traffic light turns green and will only enable buses and sanctioned vehicles to pass through. He said the gates can also be raised through a siren mechanism in the event of an emergency. Access through the restricted section of East Avenue has been off-limits to the general public since January due to the construction of Klarman Hall and work on Goldwin Smith Hall. According David Honan, deputy chief of the Cornell University Police Department, vehicles driving illegally through the area have been a major problem for Cornell Police and are

dangerous for both drivers and pedestrians. “It creates a serious safety issue and reduces the effectiveness of maintaining the corridor for bicyclists and mass transit,” he said. “Cornell Police have stopped many cars and provided educa-

tion and traffic tickets for infractions.” Aymar Marino-Maza ’15 said she believes that the addition of the new gates will not completely eliminate the problem of traffic violations. See TRAFFIC page 5

Closing the gates | Several signs on East Avenue indicate that the road is closed to all vehicles, exlcuding TCAT buses and bicycles.

DIANA MAK / SUN STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
03 21 14 entire issue lo res by The Cornell Daily Sun - Issuu