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The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 130, No. 47
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
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ITHACA, NEW YORK
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News
Arts
Sports
Weather
The Science Guy
Girls Girls Girls
Ice Ice Baby
Showers, Wind HIGH: 62 LOW: 43
Prof. Richard Daziano, engineering, was one of several professors who received an NSF award. | Page 3
Alice Wang ’15 issues some predictions for the upcoming season of Girls.
Men’s hockey prepares to play Princeton and Quinnipiac this weekend. | Page 20
| Page 13
Minority Students: Racist Costumes Are Unacceptable
Costumes galore
By AKANE OTANI Sun Managing Editor
Eschewing sultry cat costumes and Breaking Bad outfits, some Cornellians celebrating Halloween this year have donned sombreros, kimonos or feather headdresses instead — outraging minority students who insist that cultural stereotypes are not acceptable costumes. “Halloween is not an excuse to be culturally appropriative or racist,” Brenda Martinez ’15 said. “Culture is how people construct and produce their everyday lives, and appropriating others’ culture makes a mockery of their existence.” See HALLOWEEN page 5
KELLY YANG / SUN SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER
A student attends a class while wearing a Halloween costume. Some students have criticized their peers’ choice of costumes involving kimonos, sombreros or other culturally-based symbols, saying they are examples of cultural appropriation.
Alumni Reflect on Public Sector Jobs Student Uses Photographs to
By ASHLEY CHU Sun Staff Writer
Despite partisanship and political sparring souring many Americans’ opinion of the governm e n t , “I never thought I would y o u n g Cornell be working for the alumni federal government.” who have entered the Mackenzie Wallace ’12 public sector say they have found meaning in their work. “I never thought that I would be working for
the federal government, but I am so happy that I am,” said Mackenzie Wallace ’12, a financial analyst at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Wallace said he discovered his interest in social entrepreneurship during his undergraduate years at Cornell. Later, when he realized that he could “do social good” and “still practice business” by working in the public sector, he began feeling inspired to join the government. “I found out about the Bureau and this new inaugural program that they were starting, and I wanted to be a part of it. It is a phenomenal See GOVERNMENT page 4
Break Anorexia Stereotypes
By SOFIA HU Sun Contributor
When people are asked to imagine a person suffering from anorexia nervosa, many of them think of an underweight, female adolescent — something Laura Zwanziger ’15 is working to change on campus. For the past month, Zwanziger
has been photographing females who have stripped down to their underwear to show that people cannot tell if someone suffers from anorexia based on their body size. The photographs, which only show the models’ torsos, keep all models completely anonymous. When she finishes the project, See ANOREXIA page 5
Small Fire Breaks Out In Goldwin Smith Hall By AKANE OTANI Sun Managing Editor
EMMA COURT / SUN CITY EDITOR
Firefighters to the rescue | Firefighters arrive to evacuate Goldwin Smith Hall Thursday morning after an electrical fire broke out in the building’s elevator machinery room.
As students attended class in Goldwin Smith Hall Thursday morning, a small fire broke out, filling the building with smoke and necessitating its evacuation. No injuries were reported. At approximately 9:30 a.m., a Cornell Environmental Health and Safety worker noticed smoke emerging within the building, according to the Ithaca Fire Department. When
firefighters arrived on the scene, they found that an electrical fire had broken out in the elevator machinery room. The fire was quickly knocked down, and firefighters cleared the smoke from the building, according to the IFD. Goldwin Smith was reopened by 10:30 a.m., IFD said. Firefighters are currently investigating the cause of the fire. Akane Otani can be reached at managing-editor@cornellsun.com.