INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880
The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 136, No. 47
THURSDAY, JANUARY 23, 2020
n
12 Pages – Free
ITHACA, NEW YORK
News
Dining
Sports
Weather
FBI Grad
Fan of Franny's
Familiar Faces
Getting Warmer
CUPD Chief Deputy Officer becomes the third officer from the University to become one. | Page 3
Dominic Law ’21 argues that Franny’s is Cornell Dining's best kept secret.
Cornell men’s hockey prepares for rematches with Harvard and Dartmouth. | Page 12
| Page 7
HIGH: 39º LOW: 22º
University Continues Crackdown on Greek Life
New regulations cap small events at 99 attendees, toughen rules around serving alcohol By SARAH SKINNER
The Office of Sorority and Fraternity Life rolled out sweeping new regulations for Greek Life events on Wednesday evening, restricting events to four days per week, requiring catering services for all alcohol served and limiting co-sponsors on approved events. The new rules forbid chapters themselves from serving alcohol at mixers
your own bartender” — a version of “bring your own beverage” or BYOB — policy for all events, including small ones. The new regulations also reduce these “small” events by a third, cutting them from 150 or fewer attendees to 99 or fewer. Every event must also contract an independent monitoring service, such as Cayuga’s Watchers. At the start of the academic year, at
Any event with 100 or more attendees — a “large” event, previously between 150-250 attendees — must hire Cornell-approved, third-party security.
Sun Managing Editor
and events; all alcoholic drinks must be sold “per-drink” by a liquor-licensed caterer on-site, from a list provided by Cornell. If a caterer is not hired, of-age students are required to stick to a “be
least 13 of the IFC fraternities had more than 70 members. Any event with 100 or more attendees — a “large” event, previously between 150-250 attendees — must hire Cornellapproved, third-party security. The Student and Campus Life website details only two approved security firms, Westcott Events and Amric Associates. The Interfraternity Council website also lists Cayuga Security and Investigation, Inc. See REGULATIONS page 4
Students, Faculty Shoot Down HumEc Rebrand By TAMARA KAMIS Sun Staff Writer
A contentious Faculty Senate meeting on Wednesday showed the depth of faculty disapproval for the proposed rebranding of the College of Human Ecology as the College of Public Policy. On Jan. 16, the final recommendations of the Social Sciences Implementation Committee were made public. For non-policy departments, such as Design and Environmental Analysis, Fiber
Science and Apparel Design, and Nutritional Sciences, their future in the college is unclear, concerning many students and faculty. Faculty members were largely critical of the committee’s proposal to rebrand the College of Human Ecology, and many applauded criticisms of the proposal. Prof. Yasser Gowayed, chair of the Fiber Science and Apparel Design department, raised questions about the effect that limiting the scope of the committee process
had on its outcomes. “By limiting their scope, they forced themselves to an inevitable answer,” Gowayed said. The committee’s report acknowledged potential challenges. In its report, the committee noted that supporting non-policy faculty unhappy with the College of Public Policy was “beyond our committee’s charge.” The committee also wrote that they “implore the administration to take seriously See HUMEC page 4
Campaign break COURTESY OF CORNELL DANCE TEAM
Universal dancing | The Cornell University Dance Team traveled to Orlando, Florida over winter break for its first national dance competition.
Dance Team in First National Contest By ARI DUBOW Sun Staff Writer
ERIN SCHAFF / THE NEW YORK TIMES
Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) takes a break from the Senate President Trump impeachment hearings.
Days before returning to Ithaca for an icy first week of class, the Cornell Dance Team could be found taking a national stage in Orlando by storm. Cornell danced among over 200 other college dance teams in the Universal Dance Association College Dance Team National Championship, one of the “most prestigious
college dance team competitions in the country,” according to its website. The team competed in the Division 1 jazz competition, where it faced 30 other colleges in that contest. This was Cornell’s first year competing in a national dance competition. While the matchups only went on for three days, the team traveled to Florida several days early — first to Tampa, and then to Orlando — to practice.
“We rented a space and practiced seven or eight hours a day,” said Amanda Hernandez ’21, a member of the championship-participating squad. While the team did not qualify to compete in the final round, according to Hernandez, it left the competition feeling accomplished and motivated to compete more in future years. See DANCE page 4