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INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 135, No. 21

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 2018

n

12 Pages – Free

ITHACA, NEW YORK

News

Arts

Sports

Weather

New Year, New Goals

A Villain, But Not Super

Winning Streak

Partly Sunny

President Pollack outlines her plans for this academic year in her annual address to faculty and staff. | Page 3

Zach Lee ’20 reviews Sony’s Venom, which aims high but misses the target.

For the second straight year, Cornell football beat Harvard in comeback fashion. | Page 12

| Page 10

HIGH: 79˚ LOW: 64˚

C.U. Has Most Reported Sexual Assault Cases of All N.Y.Colleges The number nearly doubles NYU’s, second on the list By MARYAM ZAFAR Sun Staff Writer

MEGAN ROCHE / SUN PROJECTS EDITOR

Cornell University had the highest number of reported sexual assault incidents out of every university and college in New York in the period from January to May 2018, according to interim data collected by the New York State Department of Education. With 199 incidents, Cornell has almost twice the number of incidents reported by students at New York University, which is second on the list with 100 incidents, followed by the University at Albany, with 61. With enrollment size taken into consid-

Double trouble | Cornell’s 199 reported cases of sexual assault are nearly double that of NYU, second on the list with 100, followed by Albany with 61.

eration, Cornell’s numbers are even more significant: NYU has 51,123 students enrolled compared to Cornell’s 24,123. “I think [the high reported incident count is] a good thing,” said Cornell Title IX director Chantelle Cleary. “Every single report is an opportunity to provide the person who had the experience with information that can help them.” Cleary previously served as the Title IX director at the University of Albany for three years. Prior

to that, she was a special victims prosecutor. “My hope is that the reports continue to increase,” Cleary said. “If it’s happening, then I want to know about it, because I want to be able to provide students with support.” National statistics compiled by the Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network suggest that 23.1 percent of — almost one in four — college-aged women are sexually assaulted. Cleary, who joined Cornell as MEGAN ROCHE / SUN PROJECTS EDITOR

Size matters | Cornell’s 199 reported incidents are even more significant due to its smaller enrollment size of 24,123 students, compared to NYU’s 51,123.

Title IX director this year, said that it is unlikely that Cornell’s campus culture is significantly different from that of other universities’ or the national statistics. Following the “Enough is Enough” law passed in 2015, the University is required to report to New York State all incidents of sexual assault, dating violence, domestic violence and stalking that are reported to the Title IX office. Of the incidents that were reported, though, very few individuals chose to purSee TITLE IX page 4

Former Psi Upsilon House Now Residential Space By SARAH SKINNER Sun Assistant News Editor

In August, the brandnew Equity and Engagement Living-Learning Community quietly opened its doors in the former house of Cornell’s chapter of the Psi Upsilon fraternity — infamous for sexual and racial assault incidents — at 2 Forest Park Lane in West Campus. The living-learning community, currently at its

full capacity of 35 residents, promises to foster a residential community that “embraces the strengths of diversity, multiculturalism, and intersectionality,” preparing residents to be “strong leaders in a pluralistic world,” according to a statement provided to The Sun by Devon Carrington, assistant director of residential programs. Cornell placed the Chi chapter of Psi Upsilon on See PSI U page 4

BORIS TSANG / SUN ASSISTANT PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

Heartfelt conversation | During lunch with 12 members of the Cornell Republicans, Reed offered to be the moderator between conservative students and the Cornell administration if they ever feel hesitant to speak up.

Rep.Tom Reed Offers Support to Conservatives By MATTHEW McGOWEN Sun Senior Editor

JASON BEN NATHAN / SUN FILE PHOTO

A new purpose | The former fraternity house will now be focusing on fostering “diversity, multiculturalism and intersectionality.”

In a rare visit to Cornell’s campus, Rep. Tom Reed (R-N.Y.) met with 12 members of the Cornell Republicans for an informal round-table discussion and lunch at Taverna Banfi. Conversation centered primarily around the experience of conservative students on college campuses, with Reed offering to be the moderator between the students and Cornell administration.

Reed’s visit to Cornell was part of his campaign to visit the schools of college students across the district with election day now less than a month away, according to Michael Johns ’20, a columnist for The Sun and president of the Cornell Republicans. Reed has represented New York’s 23rd district since 2013, but his Republican politics are often at odds with mostly left-leaning Ithaca, a dynamic characterized by Reed’s Extreme Ithaca Liberal ad See REED page 4


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