INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880
The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 129, No. 30 News Apple of the City’s Eye
The City of Ithaca celebrated its annual Apple Festival this weekend, selling fresh produce and local food on the Commons. | Page 3
News Boys and Girls of Campus
The Student Assembly passed a resolution Thursday that would bring back gender-neutral housing to campus, if approved by President David Skorton. | Page 3
Opinion Night With the Police
Noah Karr-Kaitin ’13 shares his observations from a night riding along with the Cornell University Police Department. | Page 9
Arts Brain Behind the Building
Daveen Koh ’14 reviews Sam Green’s documentary on the ‘playful’ architect Buckminster Fuller. | Page 11
Sports Bright Beginning
Head coach Jaro Zawislan recounts the men’s soccer team’s victory Saturday. | Page 20
Weather
MONDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2012
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ITHACA, NEW YORK
20 Pages – Free
Students to C.U.: Assault Victims Need More Help By KERRY CLOSE Sun News Editor
In a meeting with administrators Friday, students called on Cornell to improve the publicity of existing resources for victims of sexual assaults and asked for more transparency from the administration about its response to recent sexual crimes that have occurred on campus. The meeting had been planned since last semester, according to Lynette Chappell-Williams, associate vice president for workforce diversity and inclusion. However, in the aftermath of multiple reported sexual assaults, including a reported attempted rape Wednesday evening, the meeting attracted more than 100 students — far more than organizers had expected, Chappell-Williams said. “Our goal today was to start with the demands put forth by some students in previous settings,” said Laura Weiss, director of the Women’s Resource Center. “We felt [the demands] to be a starting point for what we need to do and where we need to go as a community in the future.” But some students in attendance demanded more immediate action.
Showers HIGH: 66 LOW: 48
See SEXUAL ASSAULT page 4
CUPD Jaywalking Campaign Meets Mixed Student Reactions By MANU RATHORE Sun Senior Writer
and DANIELLE SOCHACZEVSKI
Sun Staff Writer
Provoking skepticism, frustration and even “jaydancing” among students, the Cornell University Police Department issued 94 tickets during its annual roadway safety campaign last week — down from 143 tickets last year. Fifty-four of the tickets were given out to those who were “crossing on a steady
red pedestrian signal,” according to David Honan, deputy chief of CUPD. Nine jaywalkers were given tickets; twenty-one people on bikes were given tickets for infractions ranging from having two headphones plugged in to disobeying red lights and stop signs. Additionally, one skateboarder was given a ticket for a crossing violation, according to CUPD. See JAYWALKING page 4
The big apples
NATHAN WEBER / THE NEW YORK TIMES
Chance for a new life | Undocumented immigrants apply for deferred action — a status that would defer their deportation and grant them work permits — in Chicago, Ill., this summer.
Cornell Law School Aids Undocumented Students By AKANE OTANI
could qualify for President Barack Obama’s deferred action policy. If their application is approved, At a workshop Saturday, Cornell Law undocumented students will also be able School professors and students worked to work legally and apply for a driver’s to assist undocumented youth applying license, according to Hazeldean. for deferred action — a status that, if “This is potentially a chance for granted, may allow thousands of undoc- them to come out of the shadows and umented immigrants living in upstate really live a full life,” Hazeldean said. New York to temporarily be protected For the estimated 15 to 30 undocufrom depormented stutation. dents at “This is potentially a chance for Under Cornell, the the policy, [undocumented students] to come out of promises which was the shadows and really live a full life.” b e h i n d announced S a t u r d a y’s on June 15, Prof. Susan Hazeldean workshop undocu— and the mented individuals who can prove that hope it raised for their future — was a they came to the U.S. before they were long time coming. 16 years old, have a clean criminal As Obama announced the deferred record and satisfy other requirements action policy this summer, Adrian Palma will be able to stay in the country for at ’13 was moved to tears. Palma said he least two years. knew the announcement was the news The law school’s initiative was a that many of his undocumented friends response to a “real need in the commu- had sought for years: “to finally be able nity,” according to Prof. Susan to live in this country without fear.” Hazeldean, law, who estimated that as many as 2,500 young adults in the area See UNDOCUMENTED page 5
Sun News Editor
NYC Startups Recruit at Tech Career Fair By JACOB GLICK Sun Staff Writer
SEYOUN KIM / SUN STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Students and members of the Ithaca community descend on the Commons on Sunday to enjoy apples and other goods from local vendors. See p.3 for more.
Cornell University and the New York City Economic Development Corporation hosted a career fair Friday as part of the city’s ongoing “Tech Talent Draft” initiative, which seeks to give students career advice and exposure to NYC’s tech startup community. The event, which featured representatives from more than a dozen tech startup companies, is the result of collaboration between student organizers and the EDC,
according to event planners. Jesse McElwain ’13, one of the event’s organizers, said that after helping organize the University’s Startup Career Fair last semester, he thought it would be productive to have a career fair designed for startup companies being supported by the NYCEDC. “The EDC wanted to come up, but there was no one entrepreneurial career service office to provide the required resources,” McElwain said. “Having students help out with the event is how it was able to succeed.” Mark Savage, director of
Career Services for the College of Engineering, said he contacted about 6,000 Cornell students via email to inform them about the event. “We wanted to bring a representative group of students here and I think it’s going pretty well,” Savage said. “Students who come here are really looking for a niche in the startup community, and not necessarily a Fortune 500 company.” Timothy Novikoff grad, who teaches a course in iPhone app development at See STARTUPS page 5