09-27-12

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INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 129, No. 28

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 2012

!

ITHACA, NEW YORK

20 Pages – Free

Int’l Grad Student Funding Splits House Hopefuls Enrollment Soars GOP candidate for N.Y. 23rd REED

By NIKKI LEE

Sun Staff Writer

Following a decade-long trend of rising enrollment of international students in the Graduate School, the proportion of international students rose again this year, by four percent — bringing the number to nearly 49 percent of the class, according to Graduate School communications coordinator Elizabeth Ellis. Graduate students from China alone comprise 23 percent of incoming students this year. Female international graduate students in professional master’s degree programs saw the sharpest increase in enrollment, rising by 64 percent in the last 10 years, according to the 2010-11 Graduate School Annual Report. International males followed with 29-percent growth over the same time period, according to the report. Jason Kahabka M.S. ’03, assistant dean for student services and admissions of the Graduate School, said the rise in international student enrollment corresponded with an increase in international applicants — a trend he attributed in part to a growing demand among students around the world for graduate-level education. “As countries develop and there’s more of a middle-class and more educational opportunities globally, those students are certainly looking for the very best graduate education available,” Kahabka said. He noted that this is especially true today of students hailing from

outraising Dem. candidate

In the race for New York’s 23rd Congressional district, money divides incumbent Rep. Tom Reed (R–N.Y. 29) and Democratic candidate Nathan Shinagawa ’05 M.A. ’09 almost as much as political opinion. According to the most recent data provided by the Federal Election Commission and the candidates, Reed has raised $1.4 million — approximately three times as much as his Democratic rival Nathan Shinagawa ’05, M.A. ’09, who has raised approximately $500,000. FEC disclosures from June show that the two candidates rely on divergent sources of funding. Reed’s campaign has raised 53.8 percent of its money from what the FEC calls “other committee contributions,” commonly known as political action committees. See CAMPAIGN page 5

11% other

SHINAGAWA

9% PACS 87% Individual Donors 4% other

These graphs show the funding sources for the Democratic and Republican Congressional candidates. Data from June.

NYT Reporter Defends Citing False Students’ Names,Years

News Sustainability Buff

Prof. Frank DiSalvo, chemistry, was reappointed to his post as director of the Atkinson Center for a Sustainable Future.

By REBECCA HARRIS Sun News Editor

and LIZ CAMUTI

Sun City Editor

| Page 3

Opinion Sex in the Stacks

Jimothy Singh ’13 details his personal guidelines for having a positive sexual experience in the notorious “stacks” of Cornell’s libraries. | Page 7

Arts No Doubt About This One

Jason Goldberg ’14 says No Doubt’s new album, Push and Shove, was worth the wait, giving it an A- grade.

After fabricated identities of Cornell students appeared in a New York Times story Wednesday, Times reporter Courtney Rubin ’96 told The Sun that they were accurate representations of what she was told on Sept. 12 at Level B. The story, “Last Call for College Bars,” cited several students by names and class years that stu-

dents personally acquainted with the quoted individuals told The Sun on the condition of anonymity were false. As first reported by the blog IvyGate, the names — including “Michelle Guida” and “Vanessa Gilen,” who were cited in the story as 21-year-old Cornell students — are not listed in the University directory. Rubin, a freelance writer for The Times, said she was “gob-smocked” by any implication that she may have fabricated the names of the students.

“I’m honestly shocked by this. I’m looking at my notebook, going over my notes … It’s all here,” Rubin said Wednesday night. “I can clearly see where it was in Level B where I spoke to them and what they were wearing. Why would I make up names? I don’t make stuff up.” She added that she had not considered at the time that the students could be lying. “Short of asking people for ID, you [assume] that when people give you a name, they represent

These boots are made for jaywalking

themselves as who they are or say ‘I don’t want to be quoted,’” she added. “If I asked them for IDs, they probably would’ve given me fake IDs. … I assume they gave me the names on their fake IDs.” Additionally, a photo caption also identifies three students — shown laughing over fishbowls at Level B — as “John Montana, David Lieberman and Ben Johnson.” The three students, referred to as “Cornell seniors” in the photo caption, are identified by false names and

are in fact members of the Class of 2014, according to the sources. Rubin said Wednesday that she did not personally have contact with the students featured in the photo, saying a Times photographer took down the student’s names at a later date. One of the students, who The Sun has granted anonymity, confirmed that he had never spoken to Rubin. Jeff Stein contributed reporting to this article. The Sun can be reached at news@cornellsun.com.

Grounds Crew Plows Past Obstacles, Down Snow-Filled Slope

| Page 9

Dining Eat Your Vegetables

In a city full of “green” dining options, Meghan Flynn ’15 ranks her five favorite vegetarian eateries in Ithaca.

By MANU RATHORE

| Page 10

Sun Senior Writer

Sports 40 Years Strong

The women’s volleyball team kicked off its 40th season this week. | Page 20

Thunderstorms HIGH: 72 LOW: 48

39% Individual Donors

Sun Staff Writer

See GRAD SCHOOL page 5

Weather

53% PACS

By MATT ROSENSPIRE

JEVAN HUTSON / SUN CONTRIBUTOR

CUPD officers issue tickets to bikers and pedestrians outside Anabel Taylor Hall on Wednesday as part of their annual road safety campaign.

Weather-dependent work hours, late night phone calls and early morning snow plowing are just a few of the nuisances that come with a job with Cornell’s Grounds Department. But despite these and other difficulties, members of the Central Campus landscape team “really enjoy what they are doing” and often push past natural obstacles that get in their way, said Dayton Allen ’86, the grounds crew’s leader. “When we are interviewing people for a job here, See GROUNDS page 4


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