3-17-22 entire issue hi res

Page 1

INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 138, No. 58

THURSDAY, MARCH 17, 2022

n

8 Pages – Free

ITHACA, NEW YORK

AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY

TWO YEARS AFTER CAMPUS COVID-19 SHUTDOWN, CORNELLIANS LOOK BACK Reflect on unanticipated hardships, empty campus

A NEW C.U. INDOOR SCENE: MASKED AND UNMASKED

By ROMAN LAHAYE and ELI PALLRAND Sun News Editors

Two years later, a dwindling number of students on campus remember when the University shut down on March 13, 2020 as COVID-19 began to appear in the United States. Perhaps relaxing in their dorms, enjoying the company of friends while they still could or studying for prelim they would have to take that night, students suddenly found their campus shut down, students being ordered off campus and courses suspended until April 6. Many learned of the move through the leaked image of an official University email that would follow shortly, and the news went viral. As COVID-19 took root in the United States, the University shut down as a prevenSee COVID-19 page 3

HANNAH ROSENBERG / SUN SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER

Times they are a changin’ | Two students sit in Libe Café, inside Olin Library. Per a rule change effective on March 14, students can now choose whether or not to wear protective facial coverings in some non-classroom campus spaces, altering a two-year mask mandate.

University Increases Tuition, Financial Aid Uygher Student Question at Promises record aid funding as part of new fundraising campaign

CIPA Event Sparks Controversy

By ANGELA BUNAY

By SURITA BASU and PAREESAY AFZAL

Sun Managing Editor

On Tuesday afternoon, Cornell University announced that the Board of Trustees approved the 2022-2023 budget, which includes an increase in tuition rates for the upcoming academic year alongside increases in grant-based financial aid. With the newest budget, the tuition rates will increase by between 3.6 and 3.9 percent depending on the college. As tuition rises steadily every year, the board has raised financial aid funding to compensate. Grant-based financial aid will increase by eight percent compared to the previous budget year, resulting in a $363 million investment in aid, a record for Cornell according to the University. The University explained in their press release that the decision to increase financial aid funding was done as part of their “To Do the Greatest Good” campaign goal of increasing affordability at Cornell. “The campaign seeks to increase the number of aid-eligible undergraduates by 1,000, reduce undergraduates’ average borrowing, and exempt those with limited financial resources from a summer work earnings requirement, allowing more students the freedom to pursue unpaid research or other pre-professional opportunities,” the University said in a press release. According to the University, of the 14,743 full-time undergraduate students enrolled in Fall 2020, 54 percent of the student body receives need-based aid, and 48 percent

receive a Cornell grant, which does not need to be repaid by the recipient. The median Cornell grant in 2021 was $47,563. “We continue to invest in financial aid as a key part of our foundational commitment to inclusion, and as an essential component of maintaining our academic excellence,” President Martha Pollack said in a University press release. Beginning in fall 2022 all first and second-year students will be required to live on campus and have meal plans. In the newly approved budget, the cost of housing and dining will increase by 3.9 percent during the 2022-23 academic year. This includes a 4.7 percent — or $464 — increase in the housing fee, bringing the fee to $10,426, and a 2.75 percent — or $178 — increase in dining fees, which will end up at $6,612. Jonathan Burdick, vice provost for enrollment, said in the University’s Tuesday statement that the rise in Cornell grants will offset any increase in costs for most students with financial need. The tuition cost for master’s degrees will increase between zero and nine percent, depending on the degree, with most rising by 3.6 percent. The rise in tuition for law, veterinary and Masters in Business Administration degrees also varies, but tops out at 3.6 percent. Doctoral degree tuition will not face any tuition increases.

Sun Assistant Managing Editor and Sun Assistant News Editor

On Thursday, March 10, a group of Chinese international students enrolled in Cornell’s Masters in Public Administration program walked out of an event when their fellow classmate, Rizwangul NurMuhammad grad, a Uyghur woman, spoke about her brother’s detention by the Chinese government. The event was part of the Cornell Institute for Public Affairs Colloquium program, which brings speakers to campus every week for conversations with MPA students. Last week featured Rep. Elissa Slotkin (D-Mich.). During a question and answer period, NurMuhammad asked Slotkin why the U.S. and international community has reacted to punish Russia for invading Ukraine without taking similar action on the Chinese government for its genocide of Uyghur people. Axios reported that in her question, NurMuhammad said that her brother Mewlan had been arrested in 2017 when Chinese authorities began mass detentions of Uyghurs in Xinjiang. According to attendees, the audience booed as NurMuhammad asked her question. The disruption was followed by a large group of Chinese students walking out of the lecture hall.

Angela Bunay can be reached at abunay@cornellsun.com.

See CIPA page 3

News

Science

Science

Weather

Mural Madness

Salamander Season

Tanzanian Hypertension

Partly Cloudy

Under new rules, Creative and Performing Arts Program House Risley will have over 100 student murals removed. | Page 3

The presence of salamanders around campus is one indicator of spring’s arrival. | Page 8

Weill Cornell Physicians Dr. Peck and Dr. Downs spoke to The Sun about using religion to combat hypertension. | Page 8

HIGH: 64º LOW: 39º


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.