9-17 full issue hi res

Page 1

INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 136, No. 10

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2019

n

12 Pages – Free

ITHACA, NEW YORK

Arts Quad Bus Takes Aim at Unconscious Bias

Mobile project spends day addressing ‘blind spots’ By MEGHNA MAHARISHI Sun Contributor

‘this is a big step’

Weill Cornell: Now Debt Free for Financial Aid-Eligible Students By SARAH SKINNER and MARYAM ZAFAR Sun Managing Editor and Sun City Editor

On Monday morning, Cornell announced that Weill Cornell would provide debt-free schooling for students qualifying for financial aid. The program will go into effect as of the 2019-2020 year, Weill Cornell said. Students in Weill’s Class of 2023 — and all classes onward — will have their loans replaced by scholarships. Sticker price for Cornell medical school tuition is currently $58,760, and Weill

Move against debt draws praise from students, Bernie Sanders By MARYAM ZAFAR Sun City Editor

After Weill Cornell Medicine’s historic announcement that it would eliminate loans for students, premedical undergraduate students in Ithaca and medical students in New York City expressed skepticism, shock and excitement. Loans — the ones students are shackled with while in Ithaca, and the prospect of getting roped into more — loom over students as they think

See TUITION page 4

See REACTIONS page 4

PHOTOS BY HILARY SWIFT / THE NEW YORK TIMES

Debt slashed | Above and below: A crowd of students who have struggled with mounting debt celebrate yesterday after the dean of Weill Cornell announced that students eligible for financial aid would no longer need to take out loans.

and interactive surveys to further highlight these unconscious biases. In one such simulation, a sales clerk in a clothing store is portrayed as believing a woman is unable to pay for a handbag because she was speaking to her friend in Spanish earlier. “The main goal is to really educate people on unconscious bias, the way all we make snap judgments on the way people look and sound,” tour coordinator Anthony Petrowski told The Sun. “We’re just trying to educate them so they can be more aware of their own unconscious bias and then they can change the world one person at

A black bus with phrases like “Race,” “Diversity” and “Equity” emblazoned on it was parked in the Arts Quad on Monday, offering members of the Cornell community an opportunity to immersively experience the subtleties of discrimination. The bus was part of a mobile tour called “Check Your Blind Spots,” a project that aims to make people aware of their unconscious biases when interacting with others of different ethnicities, genders, sexual orientations and religions. Sylvana Storey, a business psychologist according to her Huffington “The main goal is to really Post profile, defines unconeducate people on scious bias as “a unconscious bias, the way bias that happens automati- we all make snap judgments.” cally, is outside of our control Anthony Petrowski and is triggered by our brain making quick judgments a time ... so they can be and assessments of people more diverse and incluand situations, influenced sive in their own lives.” The event was hostby our background, cultural environment and ed by CEO Action for Diversity and Inclusion, personal experiences.” Positioned outside the a consortium of chief bus was a wall of tele- executive officers dedicatphones where people could ed to promoting diverlisten to a phone call of a sity and inclusion in the landlord forcing a woman workplace. The organito pay three months of her zation launched in 2017 lease upfront because she and was spearheaded by is covered in tattoos and Tim Ryan, U.S. chairpiercings, whereas a man man and senior partner of mentioned in the call only PricewaterhouseCoopers had to pay for one month — one of the world’s upfront — just one exam- largest accounting and ple of the manifestation of consultancy firms. On its website, there unconscious biases. Inside the bus, there are two pledges: one for were a number of other See BUS page 5 virtual reality simulations

News

Arts

Sports

Weather

Alum Questions Candidates

More Gender Diversity

Gridiron Projections

Sunny And Warm

A former Sun editor in chief will moderate next month's Dem debate on behalf of The New York Times. | Page 3

It's time to add more women to the latest ‘Smash Bros' game, thinks Olivia Bono ’21. | Page 6

Football season predictions from Sun reporters. | Page 12

HIGH: 74º LOW: 56º


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.