INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880
The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 129, No. 40
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2012
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ITHACA, NEW YORK
16 Pages – Free
Students Stress Vigilance After Sexual Attacks By REBECCA FRIEDMAN Sun Staff Writer
Board considered the project, which, if approved, would add 67 townhouses near the University off of Route 79. Cornell has agreed to sell the land on which the townhouses would be built — 10 acres between Strawberry Hill Road and Harwick Drive — to the project’s developers, accord-
After a string of sexual assaults were reported on and near Cornell’s campus, many students say they have a heightened fear of walking alone at night and feel a greater need for being vigilant around campus. In a series of interviews with The Sun, several students said that the string of reported assaults has shaken the Cornell community — and caused them to change their behavior. “I think it really has made an impact on everyone,” Ben Chartock ’14 said. “The frequency and seriousness [of the events] hit closer to home than it ever has before.” Since the reported attacks, Chartock wonders if the police he sees on campus are there because of another attack, he said.
See HOUSING page 4
See ATTACKS page 5
COURTESY OF GREENWAYS AT EAST COMMONS
Greenways vision | Developers want to build a complex of 67 townhouses, pictured above, off of Route 79 for Cornell employees.
Town Mulls Housing Plan for C.U.Staff By JONATHAN DAWSON Sun Staff Writer
A plan to build affordable housing for Cornell employees is generating concerns from residents who live near the proposed site. At a meeting Oct. 2, the Town of Ithaca’s Planning
After Arrest,Kim’14 No Longer C.U.Student; Court Date Set By DANIELLE SOCHACZEVSKI Sun Staff Writer
As of Tuesday, Jinsoo Kim ’14 — who was arrested on Oct. 1 in connection with a break-in at 312 College Ave. — was no longer enrolled as a student at Cornell,
News Must Be the Money
The Samuel Curtis Johnson Graduate School of Management saw a 17-percent increase in applications this year. | Page 3
Opinion Lay Off the Malarkey
Jon Weinberg ’13 urges Cornellians attending Howard Dean and Rick Santorum’s debate to use the event as a chance to reflect instead of fixating on choosing a “winner.”
according to the University Registrar. Kim is scheduled to next appear in court on Nov. 16, according to an official at the City of Ithaca Court. Kim, 23, was arrested by the Ithaca Police Department after a trespassing complaint on Sept. 28. He was arraigned by the
Kathy Zoner said Cornell Police has no information about Kim’s current whereabouts. “This is the Ithaca Police Department’s case, though [CUPD] does indeed have a See KIM page 4
The Battle of Bailey: Santorum v.Dean Draws Near By NOAH TULSKY Sun Contributor
As Howard Dean (D-Vt.) and Rick Santorum (R-Penn.) prepare to debate at Bailey Hall Thursday, campus politicos expressed hopes the two will steer students’ attention away from theatrics and toward JOSH HANER / THE NEW YORK TIMES
| Page 7
Science Holy Particle!
Cornell scientists sounded off on why scientists’ discovery of the Higgs Boson — coined the “God particle” — represnts a breakthrough in physics. | Page 8
Sports Not Horsing Around
The men and women’s polo teams are optimistic as they prepare to face UVA. | Page 16
Weather Clear Skies HIGH: 66 LOW: 46
City of Ithaca Court and served an order of protection — an order issued by a court “to limit the behavior of someone who harms or threatens to harm another person,” according to the New York State Unified Court System. In an email Tuesday, CUPD Chief
RICK SANTORUM faces off...
discussion of political issues. Dean, a former governor and a Democratic presidential candidate in 2004, and Santorum, a former senator of Pennsylvania who ran for president in 2012, will debate each other at an event organized by the Cornell Republicans and the Cornell Democrats. The theme of the debate is “The Role of Government in Free Society.” Student politicos said they hope that the debate will increase political awareness on campus as Election Day approaches. “I expect both Senator Santorum and Governor Dean will be engaging and informative,” said Jessica Reif ’14, chair of the Cornell Republicans. “The goal of our event is to spark political discussion leading up to the election.” Echoing Reif’s sentiments, Jessie Palmer ’13, president of the Cornell Democrats, said the two organizations selected Dean and Santorum for the debate because they felt that the politicians would be able to spar well together. “One of the reasons why we felt these two politicians would be good at debating each other is that [they] have debated each other in the past and have a good working relationship with each other,” Palmer said. Given the fiery and often theatrical nature of political debates, Jevan Hutson ’16, a member of the Cornell Forensics Society, said he hopes Dean and Santorum will focus their attention on discussing the
role of government, rather than launching personal attacks against one another. Hutson said that political debates differ from most debates because they are often won by rhetoric, instead of by the substance of debaters’ arguments. Because Dean and See DEBATE page 4 RUTH FREMSON / THE NEW YORK TIMES
... against HOWARD DEAN