INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880
The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 138, No. 11
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 2021
n
8 Pages – Free
ITHACA, NEW YORK
News
Arts
Sports
Weather
Veterans House
Homesick Concert
Homecoming Game
Partly Cloudy
Cornell’s student veterans program house opens, bringing their community closer together. | Page 3
Local bands played at the Homesick Concert event on Saturday at the Sun Building downtown. | Page 5
Football falls to VMI 0-1 after its offense can’t get going in the 4th quarter.
HIGH: 78º LOW: 57º
| Page 8
More Than One Year Later, Class of 2020 Celebrates Ithaca Commencement By ELI PALLRAND Sun Staff Writer
JULIA NAGEL / SUN ASSISTANT PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR
Homecoming weekend | Members of the Cornell community cheer from the stands of Schoellkopf Field on Saturday during the first Cornell football game in 665 days.
The Class of 2020 — Cornell’s 152nd graduating class and the first to be impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic — returned to campus Sunday for their commencement ceremony, 16 months after their original graduation day. Attendance at Schoellkopf Field, where commencement was held, included around 2,000 graduates and 4,000 guests. The celebration was limited to administration and members of the Class of 2020 and their families, as well as August 2019 and December 2019 graduates. The event was also live-streamed for students and family members who couldn’t make it to Ithaca. Traditionally, commencement marks the graduation of the current senior class, where deans of the colleges give students their diplomas. See COMMENCMENT page 3
Veterans Program House Opens After Years of Student Advocacy Student veterans call each other an important resource By TAMARA KAMIS Sun News Editor
In the former home of the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity at 625 University Ave., visitors can now find a different kind of camaraderie — a community of student veterans. After years of advocacy from student veterans, the new Cornell Undergraduate Veterans Association House opened this fall, housing 26 undergraduate students — including 20 undergraduate student veterans, a veteran law student, an undergraduate military family member,
two Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps undergraduates and two non-military students. Cornell is currently home to over 90 undergraduate student veterans and current service members, and more than 400 veterans work or study at the University. Residents say the building has helped foster a sense of community as they adjust to both civilian and University life. This Saturday, a ribbon cutting ceremony celebrated the program house through speeches and small
COURTESY OF CORNELL UNIVERSITY
Veterans house | Cornell’s student veterans find community in their new program house at 625 University Ave.
group tours of the building. “This community that [student veterans] fill helps Cornell to diversify our student body,” Kotlikoff said. “It brings students with resilience, with maturity, with humility, with a sense of mission and with a can-do attitude.” On Saturday morning, Roland Molina ’22, a United States Marine Corps veteran and current president of the Cornell Undergraduate Veterans Association, Ryan Lombardi, vice president for student and campus life, Provost Michael Kotlikoff and lecturer General George Casey, management and organizations, gave speeches at the ribbon cutting ceremony for the new Veterans House. For many student veterans, the most important resource that the new house provides is time with one another. Some said they turn to one another for advice navigating University life and have found the residential community helpful for the See VETERANS page 3
TING TING CHEN / SUN CONTRIBUTOR
Fall ClubFest | New Cornell students explore University club offerings on the Arts Quad last week at an in-person ClubFest.
Pre-Professional Groups Set Goals for Fall In-Person Events By DONGMIN SHIN Sun Staff Writer
With recruitment underway for many pre-professional organizations, members have expressed their excitement about new goals and the opportunity to meet a diverse group of students with various interests. Many pre-professional organizations said they are relieved to shift away from Zoom and meet in-person for events after a year confined to computers. “One of the biggest goals that we are trying to accomplish as an organization is both to grow in terms of diverse interest and diverse background, but also try to invest in our younger gener-
ation of underclassmen in helping them reach their career goals,” Elena Zeng ’22, president of the Phi Chi Theta business fraternity, said. Zeng said her organization is planning on doing all events in-person, such as information sessions, resume workshops and networking sessions. However, Phi Chi Theta is also staying flexible and offering Zoom options for students who feel uncomfortable meeting in person. “Especially coming out of a virtual world of COVID and Zoom, definitely we want to be there supporting [potential members] as they go through more See PRE-PROFESSIONAL page 3