Cornell undergraduate students have voted “yes” for divestment by a 2:1 ratio in a historic referendum. We want President Pollack and the Board of Trustees to know that the faculty and staff are on ...
Growing right wing authoritarianism, not Palestinian solidarity, is the biggest threat to Jewish safety here at Cornell and across the United States.
NPR media correspondent and former Sun editor in chief David Folkenflik ’91 led a panel discussion entitled, “Dissident Writers: A Conversation,” which explored censorship and freedom of expression.
Both route 14S and route 82 were originally suspended in October 2023 due to bus and driver shortages. Because these changes were deemed “major service reductions,” TCAT policy mandates a vote by the ...
Anyway, by getting a vasectomy, you can have great sex, no accidental crotch goblins, and help relieve a generation of women from intense physical, mental, emotional and financial hardship. But you ...
A source close to the team told The Sun that the news of Syer’s departure was officially announced to the players on Thursday.
Levi Pierpont reached out to me after I cited his Guardian Op-Ed in my own piece about the death of his friend, Aaron Bushnell. We ended up having a conversation about his experience in the Air Force ...
The environment on Arrakis — the desert planet central to Frank Herbert's epic science fiction series Dune — is not entirely fictional, according to Cornell scientists.
Graduate student and lab member Japheth Omonira took Sun science editor Laine Havens on a tour of the Itai Cohen lab, biophysics lab that focuses on matter in motion, including biological tissues, mic ...
I believe that exposing our community to a variety of beliefs — including those we might vehemently disagree with — is essential for a truly educational experience.
Skylar Kleinman is a member of the Class of 2027 in the College of Arts & Sciences. She is a staff writer for the news department and can be reached at skleinman@cornellsun.com.
Following a sensational Freedom of Expression theme year, President Pollack looked no further than the second amendment when deciding on next year's theme.