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INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 130, No. 59

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2013

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ITHACA, NEW YORK

16 Pages – Free

News

Arts

Sports

Weather

Doctor, Doctor

It’s Your Birthday

Making the Goal

Snow HIGH: 37 LOW: 25

C.U. EMS held events and classes last week promoting Collegiate Emergency Medical Services Week. | Page 3

Brian Gordon ’14 talks with the members of IFC’s Birthday Boys.

The men’s soccer team finished their season with a win over Columbia.

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Seeing the future

Rep.Reed Races Past Competition In Fundraising 2014 candidates seek campaign gifts By EMMA COURT Sun City Editor

RYAN LANDVATER / SUN SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER

Rob Morache speaks at a Comprehensive Plan Committee meeting Monday in City Hall, as members worked on a document that will set out a vision for the City of Ithaca’s future.

Student Pleads Not Guilty to Burglaries By DARA LEVY Sun Senior Writer

A Cornell student who pleaded not guilty to three counts of burglary, criminal mischief and obstruction last week will continue to have his case heard in Ithaca City Court, rather than a Tompkins County court, Judge Judith Rossiter J.D. ’86 ruled Thursday. Byung Jun Lee, 21, is accused of burglarizing three North Campus residences early in the morning of Nov. 9 — 508 Thurston Ave., 411 Thurston Ave. and 305 Wyckoff Ave. — according to court documents.

411 Thurston Ave. is the home of Alpha Phi sorority. According to the court documents, Lee entered the house through the basemen,went into a second floor bedroom, reached under a girl’s covers and touched her foot before fleeing. Rossiter signed orders of protection for the victims of the burglaries — all of whom are Cornell students — as well as one for a Cornell sorority house, the Ithaca Inde pendent reported. Dara Levy can be reached at dlevy@cornellsun.com.

Speaking at TEDxCornellU, Entrepreneurial Alumnus Stresses‘Interdependence’

The 23rd Congressional District caught national attention last year when newcomer Nathan Shinagawa ’05 MA ’09 lost to incumbent Rep. Tom Reed (R-23rd) by only four points. With Reed up for reelection in 2014 and the election still a year away, Reed has already spent more than his leading Democratic opponent, Tompkins County LegisReed’s campaign has lator Martha Robertson received $1,217,944 in ’75, has raised. Thus far Reed’s camtotal contributions this paign has received year through Sept. 30. $1,217,944 in total contributions this year through Sept. 30. Between July and September, Reed raised $526,772, more than the $438,327 Robertson campaign has raised in total since she announced her candidacy in April, according to an FEC quarter report. Reed has also outraised his fellow contenders for the House of Representatives. The average raised for current candidates totals $416,239, according to Open Secrets, a resource that collects federal campaign contributions and lobbying data run by the Center for Responsive Politics, a nonprofit, nonpartisan research group. Relative to campaign contributions at this point during the 2012 election, Reed’s fundraising this year is slightly highSee CAMPAIGN page 4

Saving the best for last

By GRACE HURLEY

By LINDSAY CAYNE

up in suburban Pittsburgh, Garrity Sun Contributor said he lived a happy life, yet always felt “a sense of incompleteRob Garrity ’05, founder of ness; life could be more than it Finlo Solar Powers, spoke about was.” the importance of interdepenHe said he wanted to get out dence and how he and explore the applies that concept world, so he went to “We saw such to his work at the Montana. After realbeauty and TEDxCornellU izing Montana was wisdom speaker series at not the place for Barnes Hall Sunday. him, Garrity said he around us.” In his lecture, joined up with a Rob Garrity ’05 Garrity said his main friend and “hit the goal is changing the road –– that was our way the world views power from a destination, with $600 between more traditional, hierarchical view the two of us.” to a view that values teamwork. During the trip, Garrity said he He began his presentation with See TEDX page 5 a reflection into his past. Growing

Gettysburg Address Displayed at C.U.on 150th Anniversary Sun Contributor

MICHELLE FELDMAN / SUN STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Prof. Rosemary Avery, policy analysis and management, offers life lessons during her “last lecture.”

The Gettysburg Address, considered one of the most influential speeches in American history, is on display in Cornell’s Carl A. Kroch Library in honor of its 150-year anniversary. Cornell’s version of the address — one of only five copies written in Lincoln’s own handwriting — was donated in 1949 by Nicholas H. Noyes 1906 and his wife Marguerite Lily Noyes, both of whom bought it from an antiquarian dealer in 1935. It is usually kept in the library’s Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, according to Lance Heidig, a Cornell University Library guide who headed the exhibit. Within the first three days of the manuscript going on display, Heidig said approxiSee GETTYSBURG page 5


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