3-19-19 full issue hi res

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INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 135, No. 69

TUESDAY, MARCH 19, 2019

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12 Pages – Free

ITHACA, NEW YORK

News

Arts

Sports

Weather

Travel Grants

Poem

Baseball

Partly Sunny

Lending Library offers grants to alleviate costs of traveling to interviews and standardized tests. | Page 3

Sun Columnist Ramya Yandava ’21 pays tribute to U.S. Poet Laureate W.S. Merwin. | Page 6

Baseball takes 2 out of 3; gymnastics readies for ECAC Tournament. | Page 12

HIGH: 41º LOW: 23º

‘Same story — human souls being lost at the hands of a human being’

BORIS TSANG / SUN PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

Mourning community | Students gather on Ho Plaza on Monday to remember the victims of the mosque shootings in Christchurch, N.Z.

Cornellians Mourn Mosque Shooting Victims By DENA BEHAR Sun Staff Writer

As snow fell to the ground, over 200 members of the Cornell community gathered in Ho Plaza on Monday to pay tribute to the victims of the shootings at two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand on March 15. Organized by the Muslim Chaplaincy at Cornell

and the Muslim Educational and Cultural Association, the vigil included a moment of silence for the 52 men, women and children killed in the attack as well as speeches from members of the Muslim community on campus. Chaplain Yasin Ahmed began the vigil by condemning recent terrorist attacks against religious communities, such as shootings in mosques, churches and synBORIS TSANG / SUN PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

agogues. “Same story — human souls being lost at the hands of a human being,” Ahmed said. Ahmed also remembered another religiously-motivated terrorist attack, the 2018 terrorist shooting at a Pittsburgh synagogue, which claimed 11 lives. “The same tragedy that we suffered this week, [Cornell Hillel] See VIGIL page 4

Driver in Fatal Big Red Bullet Crash Faces Homicide Charges

Local bus company currently out of service By SARAH SKINNER Sun Managing Editor

BDS | President Pollack stated her opposition to the BDS movement at a Student Assembly meeting on March 14, at which she is pictured above.

Student Groups, S.A. Candidates Address Pollack’s Response to BDS By ALEC GIUFURTA Sun Contributor

In a letter of response sent to Students for Justice in Palestine, President Martha Pollack addressed the Boycott, Divest and Sanction movement on campus and recent efforts to pass a supporting resolution within the Student Assembly, as The Sun previously reported. Reactions by student groups and Student Assembly presidential candidates varied from supportive to critical.

Pollack’s letter to SJP, posted by Cornell Hillel on Facebook on Feb. 28, acknowledged the movement on campus but clearly rejected any notion that Cornell would, or could, use its endowment for “political action.” Her response, including her personal opinion opposing the BDS movement, has galvanized a contentious issue prior to S.A. elections. The Boycott, Divestment, and Sanction moveSee BDS page 4

Charles Dwight Dixon was behind the wheel of a Big Red Bullet bus when it veered off a Pennsylvania road last October, killing a Cornell alumna onboard. Dixon — who had traces of cocaine in his system the night of the crash, hospital testing revealed — will go to trial on 26 charges, including homicide by vehicle while under the influence and involuntary manslaughter. Dixon, 50, of the Bronx, was first charged on 33 counts by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in November. He

was arraigned in Lackawanna County on Dec. 27, and has remained in custody since on a $400,000 bond, court documents stated. On Thursday, a judge determined that there was enough evidence to move to trial on 26 of the 33 counts. A full list

of charges can be found at the bottom of this article. The most severe charge — second-degree felony homicide by vehicle while under the influence of a controlled substance, See BUS page 5

COURTESY OF WNEP-TV

Bus crash | In October, this Big Red Bullet bus crashed in Pennsylvania and killed a Cornell alumna.


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