12-09-19 entire issue hi res

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INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 136, No. 42

MONDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2019

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12 Pages – Free

ITHACA, NEW YORK

News

Arts

Sports

Weather

60 Years of Service

Mourning

Men’s Hockey

Chance of Precipitation

Prof. Anil Nerode has been teaching students for the past six decades.

Rapper Juice WRLD passes away at 21.

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Cornell’s win streak was snapped as the icers faced their first loss of the year at Dartmouth. | Page 12

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HIGH: 44º LOW: 44º

Students Urge Fossil Fuel Divestment S.A. Members Create Demands given to Pollack during Day Hall sit-in

First Black Caucus

Martha

By AMINA KILPATRICK Sun News Editor

By TAMARA KAMIS Sun Staff Writer

As calls for fossil fuel divestment escalate, the protesters have moved from the sidewalks to the streets. On Friday, a coalition of student activist groups flooded Ho Plaza. These groups included Climate Justice Cornell, the Young Democratic Socialists of America chapter at Cornell, the Vegan Society and the Ithaca chapter of the Extinction Rebellion. Organizers gave speeches and led chants, and then the crowd marched through the streets before returning to Day Hall to stage a sit-in. “A non-profit university should not act like a corporation,” Nadia Vitek, an organizer for Climate Justice Cornell, told the crowd as she advocated for divestment from fossil fuels. In Day Hall, four students delivered a letter from Climate Justice Cornell and a larger list of demands to President

BORIS TSANG / SUN PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

Protest | Students gather on Ho Plaza on Friday demanding the University divest from fossil fuels.

Pollack’s receptionist. While the president did not receive the demands, 12 protestors waited outside Martha Pollack’s office until 5 p.m., and conversed with CUPD and Vice President of Student and Campus Life Ryan Lombardi. The groups are

in the process of scheduling a meeting with President Pollack. The CJC letter demands the divestment from all fossil fuel companies by Fossil Fuel Divestment Day — Feb. 13, 2020. If this demand goes unmet, the

Eleven members of the Student Assembly and its affiliated committees have organized to form the S.A’s first Black Caucus. The organization, titled Cornell Student Assembly’s Black Caucus, was founded on Sunday with a mission to “continue the work of the Black students who organized the Willard Straight Hall Takeover of 1969, which resulted in the creation of the Cornell Student Assembly.” According to a press release, which includes imagery of the Africana Studies and Research Center, Willard Straight Hall and Ujamaa Residential College, the founding of the caucus is related to treatment of black students on the S.A. and the role black students play in decision making on campus. The caucus will work towards retention of black members on the S.A., treatment of black people, representation of black people and community building, Gavin Martin ’20, chair and speaker of the caucus and an S.A. representative, told The Sun.

See CLIMATE page 4

See CAUCUS page 5

Hindu Students Fight for Chaplain

FIFA World Cup Winner Lloyd Discusses Soccer, Equal Pay

By SHIVANI SANGHANI

By KATHYRN STAMM and SEAN O’CONNELL

Sun Assistant News Editor

For nearly 20 years, Cornell Hindu Students Council operated out of an eight-by-eight foot half-closet in Anabel Taylor Hall — a reality that underscored the difficulties it has faced since its founding in the early 2000s. Currently, HSC is one of the only student religious organizations that shoulders the dual role of serving as both an entirely student-run organization and a provider of spiritual and religious care to Cornellians and Ithacans alike, according to Piragash Swargaloganathan ’19, who has helped spearhead HSC’s efforts to establish a chaplaincy. For two and a half years, HSC has been enmeshed in prolonged efforts to establish a religious chaplaincy, a linchpin and

key service of almost all of Cornell’s major religious organizations. A paid chaplain would provide serve as a life advisor, providing spiritual and religious care as a staff member. The current problem confronting Hindu students is securing funding for a chaplain. Cornell has never funded any of its religious chaplaincies — a marker of Cornell’s founding as a nonsectarian university. Instead, “chaplaincies grew on their own [through] independent advancement work,” Reverend Daniel T. McMullin, former associate director of Cornell United Religious Work, told The Sun in an email. “Each [chaplaincy] was invited to have a presence on the campus with the expectation of being available to advise and counsel

Sun Staff Writers

EMILY YANG / SUN STAFF WRITER

Hinduism | Hindu students are requesting that Cornell hire a Hindu Chaplain, after years of advocacy. the entire student population even while offering their own denominational services,” McMullin said. “Each chaplaincy was expected to be funded by its own respective denomination. The university provided no financial assistance.” HSC’s chaplaincy efforts come at the backdrop of a Student Assembly resolution

in spring 2017, when the S.A. called upon Cornell to hire its first Hindu and Muslim chaplains, The Sun previously reported. Now, two years later, HSC remains one of the only religious student organizations without a chaplain — with Cornell Christian, Jewish and Muslim See CHAPLAIN page 4

Two-time FIFA World Cup champion Carli Lloyd exchanged her number ten jersey and cleats for a sweater and jeans as she took to the stage at Cornell on Friday night. During the Cornell University Program Board-sponsored talk with Prof. Lawrence Glickman, American studies, college and high school students, men and women, adults and children alike filled Bailey Hall. Over the course of an hour, Lloyd answered questions about falling in love with soccer, facing obstacles head-on and scoring championship-winning goals. The New Jersey MARK MAKELA / THE NEW YORK TIMES

Winning goals | Soccer

player Carli Lloyd spoke to students on Friday.

native started playing soccer, among other sports, at age five, but found a passion for soccer over all the rest. “I was obsessed with it,” Lloyd said of the sport that would become her career. Despite loving the sport and having “clear natural talent,” Lloyd said she didn’t have anywhere near the fitness — both physical and mental — she does now. During her junior year at Rutgers University, Lloyd was on the U.S. Women's National Under-21 team, but missed t h e

cut for a tournament roster. Devastated, her first instinct was to quit the sport altogether. But instead, she met James Galantis, her current personal coach. When he asked about her end goal in their first meeting, she answered: “I want to play for the U.S. Women’s National Team.” After, Lloyd made soccer her number one priority, and Galantis agreed to train her — he promised that she See

SOCCER

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